Santa Pod Raceway


Santa Pod Raceway, located in Podington, Bedfordshire, England, is Europe's first permanent drag racing venue for 1/4 and 1/8 mile racing. It was built on a disused Second World War air base,, once used by the 92nd Bomber Group. The drag racing venue opened at Easter in 1966, and it is now the home of European drag racing and has grown substantially over its 53-year existence. It hosts both the first and last round of the FIA and FIM/UEM European Drag Racing Championship, along with the British National Drag Racing Championships.

Overview

It is leased and operated by Trakbak Racing which is based in London. Santa Pod regularly takes its promotional units to major events in motor sport.
Santa Pod is the venue in which the current world drag racing record, a time of 3.58 seconds at 386.26 mph was set by in his Vanishing Point rocket-propelled funny car in July 1984. Another record has also been set at Santa Pod, the world's fastest jet car Fireforce 3 piloted by Martin Hill broke the record in Easter 2005 with a terminal speed of 336.10 mph. Several other European drag racing records have been set along with records unsurpassed outside the United States. In May 2010 Top Fuel dragster driver Urs Erbacher set a class speed record with a terminal speed of 314.87 mph reached in less than 5 seconds. At the same race meeting Eric Teboul set a time of 5.23 seconds at 249 mph on his Hydrogen Peroxide Rocket Bike, which he further improved to 5.19 seconds at the European championships in September 2010. In 2012 drag-racer Andy Frost set the record of `the world's fastest accelerating road-legal car' at the UK's Santa Pod Raceway.
Santa Pod for many years remained the fastest all-asphalt dragstrip in the world since most North American tracks are partially or entirely concrete in construction. However during the winter of 2017/2018 the entire length of the track was lifted and replaced with a track constructed entirely in concrete. The reasoning behind this being that concrete gives more consistent times as it, “moves around less” than asphalt.

History

Podington airfield, near the villages of Hinwick and Podington, was formerly a Second World War airbase. In 1966 permission was obtained to use the airfield as a drag racing complex, the ¾ of a mile main runway being used as the drag strip. Santa Pod was named after Santa Ana Drags, a drag strip in California, USA, and the local village of Podington. Since then the name Santa Pod has become synonymous with the sport of drag racing in Europe. Today the raceway hosts events throughout the year including the FIA European Drag Racing Championships and the 'Run What You Brung' events where anyone with a valid driving licence can have a go and put their own vehicles and skills to the test. This also serves as a "grass roots" recruitment ground, as many who start by running their road vehicle on the track for bragging rights often progress to the next level and become competitors in National Events after obtaining a licence from the official sanctioning body MSA. The sportsman classes, also very popular with fans, are enriched by this inflow of new racers who fall in love with the sport after a fun weekend in their every day vehicles.
Santa Pod Raceway has earned the reputation as the home of European drag racing.

Notable events

47-year-old Briton Perry Watkins drove a racing vehicle decorated as a formal dining table complete with tablecloth, chairs, place settings, food and various vessels at Santa Pod in September 2010. The vehicle was dubbed "The Fast Food". It performed 2 runs at Santa Pod, topping out at 130 mph and achieving an average speed of 113.8 mph.
John Bonham from Led Zeppelin, drove a drag racer at Santa Pod, during his sequence of the film The Song Remains The Same.