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The 24 Hours of Lemons, founded by author/editor Jay Lamm (self-appointed "Chief Perp"), began in 2006 as a progression of an earlier San Francisco, California, event, the Double 500, which was a 500-kilometer road rally for US$500 vehicles.
In December 2017, the track hosted its first 24 Hours of LeMons event, the Kim Harmon Scrotium 500. The series is also scheduled to return in 2018. [7] In 2019, the track became Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta after Michelin and IMSA Holdings announced the naming rights agreement. [8]
Index of Effluency (or IOE) is the top prize awarded in the 24 Hours of LeMons automotive racing series. General criteria to win this award is a car that is too unreliable to be driven effectively on the streets yet manages to complete a decent number of laps on the race track.
If you want to win the Lemons Rally, then you need to enter a vehicle that keeps with the event's spirit, which is to drive sketchy cars to faraway places.
ChumpCar World Series founder John Condren [5] was the owner of Altamont Raceway Park in California when the first 24 Hours of LeMons events were held at the track. [6] Condren entered a team in the early LeMons races, but was dissatisfied with the party atmosphere and tongue-in-cheek mockery that continues to characterize the LeMons series. [7]
Conceived by John Ficarra, The 2904 arose as a response to the high-end “lifestyle” automotive rallies such as Bullrun and Gumball 3000.It also serves as a response to the high-dollar coast to coast record attempts by Alexander Roy, as well as drawing inspiration from endurance events like The 24 Hours of LeMons and the original Cannonball Baker Sea-to-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash.
The Fairfax store is the top-rated one in Virginia and reviewers appreciate the organized shelves and aisles that make it a breeze to find everything from chimineas to lemon-adorned serving ...
Sonoma Raceway (originally known as Sears Point Raceway, ... November: 24 Hours of Lemons; Former. American Le Mans Series. Grand Prix of Sonoma (1999–2005)