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Justin Lamb Adds Sonoma NHRA National Super Stock Victory to His Growing 2012 Resume

Justin Lamb Claims NHRA Super Stock Wally at 2012 Sonoma Nationals
Justin Lamb Claims NHRA Super Stock Wally at 2012 Sonoma Nationals
There are just some racers who are downright versatile and Henderson, Nevada's Justin Lamb continues to show that his name belongs on that elite list. Lamb recently earned his ninth NHRA National Event victory when he took the Super Stock title during the NHRA Sonoma Nationals. While he has been very successful at many facilities across the country, for Lamb there is just something that clicks for him in Sonoma, where with his latest win made a total of four at the California track. Lamb's first coming to him in 2007, when he grabbed the Super Comp win, then doing so again in 2009. His third was technically a Phoenix national event win, which was competed at the Sonoma facility.
Caption
Super Stock Sunstate/K&N 2010 Chevy Cobalt Takes Justin Lamb all the way at Sonoma Nationals


"It's hard to explain," said Lamb, when asked of his success in Sonoma. "There are just some venues that agree with particular racers. We've always had success here, so it's like a shot of confidence when I come through the gate. The only tangible explanation I can give is that this is a really tricky track in terms of predicting weather and track changes as they affect these cars. The weather and the wind are constantly changing, and it can create huge swings in E.T. We've got a lot of data here and that allows me to really trust my setup each round. That's one area where I feel like we've got an edge, particularly here in Sonoma."

Not only is Lamb versatile, so is the Sunstate/K&N 2010 Chevy Cobalt that he has been so successful in. Before returning to Sonoma, where he competed with the car in Super Stock SS/CM, he entered the same Cobalt in and won the Competition Eliminator class during the NHRA Div. 7 event in Fallon, Nevada, where he also drive his way to the 9.90 Super Gas title class as well during the same event. Following his good fortune in Fallon, he represented NHRA Div. 7 in the JEGS All-Stars event at Joliet, where he helped his Division 7 team bring home the All-Stars team championship by plowing through the Comp Eliminator field to take the runner-up honors.

Now back to a track where it seems his entire family has great luck, Lamb put the team's Cobalt right at the top of the ladder, qualifying number one in Super Stock by running nearly a second under his SS/CM index. After making it past, Richard Pinoski and SergioFelipe Crespo during round on and two, it set him up for a competition single during round three to end Saturday's on track activities.

Eyeing the remainder of his potential customers, Lamb knew he needed to stay right on his game as he was to start off championship Sunday by first facing fellow West Coast standout, Gregg Luneack in the Super Stock quarterfinal round. Fortunately for Lamb, Luneack was unable to make the call and he received a nice warm up single to start his day to sail into the semifinals where he would face one of the winningest sportsman competitors of all-time, K&N's Dan Fletcher. Fletcher, and his very familiar '69 Camaro, had just won the Denver Super Stock Wally a week prior.

No matter whom you are facing at this level of competition, but especially when so much is on the line once you have made it into the later rounds, Lamb assembled his game plan carefully and went to the line to face the sportsman racing giant, more than ready not to allow Fletcher any room right from the hit. With his near perfect reaction time of .001, Lamb quickly slammed the door on any hopes that Fletcher may have of back-to-back Super Stock national wins and was on his way to another championship final round in Sonoma.

"That was definitely the key round," Lamb admitted of his race with Fletcher. "The final was a great race too, but the semi's was big for several reasons. First off, it's the semifinals. No one remembers who loses in the semis. Plus, there's a huge swing in prize money from the semi-finalists to the finalists. On top of that, I was racing Dan Fletcher, who has won nearly 80 NHRA national events. I was happy with my lights all weekend, and made some minor adjustments to try to be high .00 or low .01 against Dan. I didn't really intend to be .001, but it certainly worked out!"

For the Super Stock final, the 25 year old Lamb would line his K&N clad Cobalt up against another very quick Super Stock entry, Dave Raybourn and his SS/AH 1968 Dart. In a rare match up, it would almost appear to the onlookers on hand, that these two competitors we running a same index heads-up race with the nearly identical dial-ins of 8.56 for Lamb and 8.58 for Raybourn.

In a round like this, reaction time was going to make a huge difference and with a nice .019 advantage at the tree, Lamb made it a squeaker at the stripe when he took just seven inches or two thousandths of a second for the win light and the 2012 NHRA Sonoma Nationals Super Stock Wally.

Lamb thanked the many great companies for their support for his family's entire fleet of winning races cars, including K&N Engineering and more notably the protection that each one of the entries receive with both K&N Wrench-off oil filters and K&N high flowing air filters.

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

Chad Moss Finds Emotionally Poignant Win at Summit Motorsports Park

Uncle Tim's 1955 Chevy continues to race strong for the team Moss family.
Uncle Tim's 1955 Chevy continues to race strong for the team Moss family.
"Everything happens for a reason! Nothing happens by coincidence or chance or by means of good luck. Illness, injury, love, lost moments of true greatness and sheer stupidities all occur to test the limits of your soul."

Without bumps and challenges life's path would indeed be unbearably smooth and straight, dull, and utterly pointless. So every now then while we're busy making other plans, life debunks any notions of - "it's only an accident" - that we may be harboring, by staring straight into our consciousness as it unveils insights that makes it difficult to refute that concept.
Moss says his 1967 Chevelle has been running consistently strong ever since he switched to a K&N air filter two years ago.
Moss says his 1967 Chevelle has been running consistently strong ever since he switched to a K&N air filter two years ago.


"For that win to take place on that particular day was a little overwhelming," reflects Amherst, Ohio's Chad Moss. On June 30, driving his 1967 Chevy Chevelle, Moss took the final round victory in the Sportsman division - the day marked the 16th anniversary of his brother's passing. It was his brother that originally got Moss and his entire family interested in racing.

"After the win, I was able to go off on my own and relish the memories that had lead up to this," Moss continued. "Lots of reflection of my brother Tim, and his wife Sarah, and what they had done to get us involved in the sport. When I told my children, Katrina and Nick, what day it was, they got choked up. It was definitely an emotional night. I called Sarah after the win and it was a special moment."

Moss began racing back in 1994 with a 1982 Camaro. "When Tim passed away in 1996, I started racing his '55 Chevy," he says. "When Katrina turned 16, she ran the '55 for a few years before moving into a 1980 Volvo. I ran the '55 for a few more years until my son took over the wheel."

His son, Nick, started racing junior dragsters when he was 8-years-old. He won a track championship in the intermediate class in 2004. He won the Elyria Pattern Big Bond Shootout in the junior dragster back in 2008. He also won the High School Nationals presented by NAPA, Amalie Oil, and the University of Northwest Ohio in 2009 (driving the Chevelle). Nick turns 21 in September, and he's a junior at Cleveland State University, where he's studying Mechanical Engineering.

His daughter, Katrina, started racing junior dragsters when she was 12. She drove a family car for a few years and then drove the JEGS junior dragster owned by Tom and Molly Stilwell for several more years. When she turned 16, she drove the '55 for a few years in the Pro class. Then she moved into the aforementioned 1980 Volvo, and finally she drove a 1991 Olds Cutlass last year, running in the 9.20 second range. The racing spirit of Uncle Tim clearly lives on in Nick and Katrina.

When Moss isn't racing he's a Product Sales Manager for Parker Hannifin, in the Industrial Hose Division, or he's golfing and scuba diving with his son. Moss isn't a sponsored K&N racer, he's a highly appreciative, grassroots racing fan of K&N products with an extraordinary racing story to tell.

"When I first built this new engine two years ago, I had a lot of trouble with consistency. A fellow racer suggested that I get a better air filter and that was when I put a K&N filter on it. It has run great ever since," reports Moss. "I'd also like to thank Bob and Judy Moss, my parents, Sarah Moss, my sister-in-law, and Barb Gula, my girlfriend, for their support."

Team Moss will next race at the annual Night under Fire show at Summit Motorsports Park, reputed to be the largest single day of drag racing in the world.

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

NASCAR K&N Pro Series West Driver Greg Pursley Wins NAPA/Toyota 150 at Colorado National Speedway

Victory Lane for NASCAR K&N Pro Series West driver Greg Pursley at NAPA/Toyota 150.
Victory Lane for NASCAR K&N Pro Series West driver Greg Pursley at NAPA/Toyota 150.
NASCAR K&N Pro Series West driver Greg Pursley had quite a productive weekend at Colorado National Speedway. He won the NAPA/Toyota 150, led every lap, and took over the lead in the K&N Pro Series West standings.

Pursley, the reigning K&N Pro Series West champion, beat Derek Thorn in a green-white-checkered flag finish to capture his third win of the season and the 12th of his K&N Pro Series West career.

"Had a lot of yellows there at the end that I didn't want to see," Pursley said. "We had a pretty good car. I was a little timid on the green-white-checkered. I didn't want to screw up leading every lap then give it away."
Dylan Kwasniewski claims 21 Means 21 Pole Award at Colorado
Dylan Kwasniewski claims 21 Means 21 Pole Award at Colorado


Thorn followed Pursley across the finish line for his seventh top-five performance in 10 K&N Pro Series West races. "Our cars didn't line up where we needed them to at the end," Thorn said. "We got two or three spots right at the very end. Can't complain about that. I got to thank Bob Bruncati for the opportunity. It's been a great, fun year. I know we haven't gotten all the finishes we've been looking for, but finishes like this - success breeds success."

Dylan Kwasniewski, who entered the race at Colorado as the K&N Pro Series West leader, won the pole and finished fifth. He took over the lead in the West Series standings after winning the race at Stockton 99 Speedway on May 5. Pursley has a three-point lead over Kwasniewski with five races remaining on the K&N Pro Series West schedule.

The race featured two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip and Ben Kennedy from the K&N Pro Series East. Waltrip, who made his seventh career start in the K&N Pro Series West, was sixth. Kennedy, who has seven top-10 finishes in nine K&N Pro Series East races, was ninth.
K&N Pro Series racer Greg Pursley leads the pack at Colorado National Speedway.
K&N Pro Series racer Greg Pursley leads the pack at Colorado National Speedway.


Pursley leads the K&N Pro Series West with three wins. He won his first race of the season at Miller Motorsports Park in Utah on April 28. He won his second race of the season at the Bullring in Las Vegas on June 2.

"It got a little bit close there on the finish," Pursley said about the closing laps at Colorado National Speedway. "We brought it home in one piece. It's an awesome day for Gene Price Motorsports and my guys."

Cameron Hayley, a 16-year-old rookie from Calgary, Canada, was third.

"It's been a long day. We struggled in practice all day long and I was not very happy with the car," Hayley said. "We wanted to get that win on the outside of Purlsey there, but we couldn't make it stick on the outside. I'm proud of the whole team. They put in a ton of effort this weekend and came out with a good finish."

The NAPA/Toyota 150 will be televised on Speed on Aug. 9 at noon PDT.

The next NASCAR K&N Pro Series race is the Pork Be Inspired 150 at Iowa Speedway on Aug. 3. The race will include teams and drivers from the K&N Pro Series West and East.

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

Cale Conley Wins First NASCAR K&N Pro Series East Race at Columbus Motor Speedway in Ohio

NASCAR K&N Pro Series East Win for Cale Conley.
NASCAR K&N Pro Series East Win for Cale Conley.
Part-timer Cale Conley won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Columbus Motor Speedway in Ohio, the first of his career.

Conley has three top-five finishes in four NASCAR K&N Pro Series East races this season. He was third in the race at Iowa Speedway and second at Gresham Motorsports Park in Georgia.

"This is pretty cool," the 20-year-old Conley said. "I gave two of them away, one at Iowa and one at Gresham.
Ben Kennedy wins pole at NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Columbus Motor Speedway.
Ben Kennedy wins pole at NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Columbus Motor Speedway.
To win this thing in a good fashion, to lead every lap, is pretty cool."

Conley started the Jegs 150, at the Columbus Motor Speedway, on the front row with pole winner Ben Kennedy. Conley took the lead on the first lap and was out front for all 150 laps. There were six cautions for 35 laps. The last caution period of the race came on lap 116 when Ryan Gifford spun out in turn 2.

"I don't really know what to feel. I know what it feels like to lose them, but I can't believe I won," Conley said. "Coming to the white flag, it was like, 'Oh my gosh, are you kidding me?' This is unreal. I just won a NASCAR race at Columbus Motor Speedway. How many people would love to do that?"

It was Conley's first win in 14 career NASCAR K&N Pro Series East starts.

Brett Moffitt finished second and padded his lead in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East standings. Darrell Wallace Jr. was third, only his third top-five finish in nine races this season.
Cale Conley leads Brett Moffitt at NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race Jegs 150 at Iowa Speedway.
Cale Conley leads Brett Moffitt at NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race Jegs 150 Columbus Motor Speedway.


It was a rough race for some of the championship contender drivers. Corey LaJoie, Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott all had flat tires at key moments in the race.

Elliott had a flat tire when the race started and had to pit. He never made up ground and finished in 15th place. LaJoie and Larson cut tires as the race was winding down. Both drivers had to pit with flat tires with less than 10 laps to go in the race.

LaJoie ended up in 17th place and Larson was 21st.

Moffitt has a 22-point lead over Elliott in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series standings after nine races.

"It was a really good night," Moffitt said. "Our car started off a little tight, but we were able to hang in there. Luckily it didn't go away too much.
Cale Conley takes checkered flag at the Jegs 150 at Columbus Motor Speedway.
Cale Conley takes checkered flag at the Jegs 150 at Columbus Motor Speedway.
I was able to play with the brakes a little to get it to turn through the middle."

Wallace, the 2010 NASCAR K&N Pro Series East rookie of the year and the 2011 runner-up in the East Series standings, has struggled this season. He won three races last year, but has yet to win a race this season.

"Good hard, racing. We got some donuts on the side there," Wallace said. "It was a good points night for us. We'll take third over anything. A third is like a win to us this year. We'll go to Iowa and hopefully win that and win the Nationwide race."

The Jegs 150 will be televised on Speed on Aug. 2 and noon PDT. The next NASCAR K&N Pro Series race is at Iowa Speedway on Aug. 3. It will be a combination race with the K&N Pro Series West.

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

Jacob Elrod Pilots His Way to a Triple History Making Weekend in Grand Bend

Just a week after a win in Kentucky, Elrod emerges unscathed after a layover during Top Dragster qualifying at the Norwalk National. Photo By: BME Photography.
Just a week after a win in Kentucky, Elrod emerges unscathed after a layover during Top Dragster qualifying at the Norwalk National. Photo By: BME Photography.
For Harrod, Ohio's Jacob Elrod, being a major player on a championship drag racing team has been a part of his life since a very early age, after all he's been taught well by his father, David Elrod, who has numerous IHRA World Championships to his name in a handful of classes. So it really comes as no surprise that Jacob has now joined his father in making some drag racing history of his own, and he did so in grand style winning three separate classes during a single event. Elrod drove two of the Team Elrod Racing entries to IHRA victories in Quick Rod [8.90 Index], Hot Rod [10.90 Index], as well as becoming the Box E.T. class winner and after the runoff race, even the overall E.T. victor during the Nitro Jam event at Grand Bend Motorplex in Grand Bend, Ontario, Canada.
All in a weekend's work for Jacob Elrod surrounded by his Hot Rod, Quick Rod and Over All E.T. Event Champion IHRA Ironman collection.
All in a weekend's work for Jacob Elrod surrounded by his Hot Rod, Quick Rod and Over All E.T. Event Champion IHRA Ironman collection.


Elrod is no stranger to competing in more than one class at a time, and with the team's stable of race cars, you just never know what classes he may show up in from event to event and the month of July proved to be one full of mountains and valleys for Elrod as he worked his way through the various team car and classes. He started off July by competing at an IHRA double divisional event in Clay City, Kentucky where he found himself with a Top Dragster win and joined one of his Team Elrod Racing teammates, Pat Forster, in the winner's circle, after Forster grabbed both a Quick Rod win and a Hot Rod runner-up all on the same day.

Unfortunately for Elrod, the high of winning wouldn't last long as he and his teammates next ventured to the NHRA National Event in Norwalk, Ohio just a few days later only to find himself upside down during a Top Dragster qualifying session due to a minor misfortune, but it looked worse than it was and the team had the car ready and back on the track for round one.

"Yeah, I get my first win of the season in Top Dragster and I go into Norwalk on 'cloud-nine', after driving really well and then I flip the car, barely qualify and then with just some stupid things that happened, our team was out first round in all three cars that we had entered," he confessed.

Where Elrod didn't have the successes he may have been gunning for at Norwalk, he shook them off and was about to more than make up for them when the team rolled into the Ontario, Canada facility two weeks later. Jacob was set to drive the team's 2003 Racetech in Quick Rod and the 1978 Chevy Monza with its 598 BBC in Hot Rod, but that wouldn't be all he would be running.
1978 Monza sporting it's K&N Pro Stock Composite Hood Scoop, One of Two Car That Jacob Elrod did "triple" duty in at Grand Bend.
1978 Monza sporting it's K&N Pro Stock Composite Hood Scoop, One of Two Car That Jacob Elrod did "triple" duty in at Grand Bend.


"We didn't enter the E.T. portion of the event until late in the day on Saturday," Elrod explained. "We made one time run, where everyone else had two or three, and when we went up for first round I was going to have to run a dragster that was much slower than us. I asked my dad if they were running cross-talk. He watched a couple of pair and you could easily tell that they were. So I set my box up and was ready to go."

"I get up there, I'm looking at both sides and my tree doesn't come on and I look over and her side is on and I thought 'oh, no', he exclaimed. "I let go of the button and I'm hitting the bump down button as fast as I can and I'm like a second on the tree. Well, the girl did her job and I thought about asking them for a rerun, but it was her birthday and they were all excited that she won, so I knew they had buybacks for first round E.T., so that's what we did."

By the time festivities were in the books for Saturday, Elrod had already advanced to second round of both Quick Rod and Hot Rod, plus he would be heading into the Box E.T. buyback round. Now, he's looking ahead to how many rounds he needed to go to get the win in each class, as well as putting together a game plan with the team.

"I knew there were only three more rounds in Quick Rod and Hot Rod I knew there were four more rounds," he reflected. "In Hot Rod, the guy I ran second round broke, so I had an easy round there and that gave me the bye at seven cars for round three. That was about the time Sunday morning that things got really hairy."

Elrod may have been running three classes, but he was doing so by only utilizing two cars, with the dragster pulling double duty of both the 8.90 throttle stop index class with its .400 Pro Tree as well as the Box E.T. class, which is a wide open .500 Full Sportsman Tree. Two very different ways to race and somewhat different starting line procedures to manipulate in the same car.
Getting closer to a chance to make drag racing history, Jacob ever-so-carefully stages his 2003 Racetech during the final round of Box E.T.
Getting closer to a chance to make drag racing history, Jacob ever-so-carefully stages his 2003 Racetech during the final round of Box E.T.


"The officials told me they weren't going to wait on me or hold up the show," he pointed out. "I don't think they ever had to wait on me and actually a couple of times when I was the first car to the lanes when the class was called. Without my team, wow, I would literally jump out of one car, not even take my suit off and jump into the other one, time slip in hand. So when I would get up into the lanes as we were determining lane choice, I was studying my time slip to try to use that to decide what I was going to do, dial in a car that was completely different than what I just ran. No time to look at the weather station, nothing."

Where he was quite pleased with his driving skills in the dragster, whether it being very consistent on the tree in E.T. and some mad driving skills at the top end in Quick Rod, Elrod is the first to point out his blessings in Hot Rod. "I was a tank," he laughed. "Hot Rod was really all a blessing from Grandma Jetta, I swear. She had to be sitting down with angel wings on the Hot Rod car, because I was trash on the starting line all day. But, I had the faster car [more MPH] and I was driving the finish line pretty well."

Another part of Elrod and his extremely tightknit families' tremendous month of July, was losing a very important family member, Jetta Jones Elrod Leonard just a few days before leaving for the Grand Bend event. "I knew she was right there with me for every round," he added.

As Elrod blasted his way through the rounds in all three classes, it really started to sink in that winning all three categories during a single event and making drag racing history was well within his grasp. Even with all the pressure, Elrod kept his thinking on the light side. "The announcers started messing with me," he chuckled. "The speakers are so close and ever by the track where you can hear sometimes in the car, that after I got the first win in Quick Rod, he says something like ok, he's already got one win, let's keep a tally and see if he can get another one. The stands are just packed, the Canadian fans are something else and cheering, but it's also like they are waiting for the show to drop."

Elrod's final round matchup found him taking on Rick Stroud, where Elrod more than doubled his competitor up on the tree and pushed Stroud farther under the index for a double breakout victory, the first of the day with more to come.

"Once I got the Quick Rod win, I just felt like I had a monkey off my back and then later with the Hot Rod win, I just felt so relaxed," he said. "But right after the Quick Rod final, I knew at that point I still had three or four rounds left in the E.T. class, but it was just all fun after that and I really didn't feel any pressure."

He earned his second IHRA event championship Ironman of the day by denying Kevin Orr the winlight in a very similar run to his final in Quick Rod. Elrod was holding a hundredth as they blew by the tree and carried it to the 1320 ft. mark, again forcing his competitor take the stripe, for another double breakout win.

"I don't know how else to say it, but at this point we are thinking let's see how much fun we can have with this, this could get really offensive," he joked about the possibility of winning three categories. "We could look really greedy, but when else are you going to have the opportunity to accomplish something like this."

Just minutes after his second win of the day, Elrod moved his efforts back to finishing off the Box E.T. class where he trailered Dan Morgan by putting together a much tighter total round package and now, it was time to seal the deal.

Although Elrod's team members have all has their fair share of successes at the facility over the years, he had only just as recent as last year won his first race at the venue when he secured the IHRA Nitro Jam Box E.T. win as well as the overall E.T. title.

And now he was looking to do it again in 2012.

To take it all, Elrod still had one more run to go for the overall E.T. winner title where he would face Steve Doornsbosch for a shot at not only the $5,000 to the champion, but a chance to make drag racing history. Where most would think that Elrod had the most to lose, it wasn't he but his competitor that seemed to fold under the pressure, and at his home track, Doornsbosch missed the green by .020 and with the gesture he thereby handed Elrod the final piece to the puzzle of what has to be the most phenomenal race weekend of his life.

"Just unbelievable," he reflected of the moment. "I even got to drive the car back up the track and was stopped by and getting congrats and high fives from the officials and then I got the ice cold cooler treatment, too. [laughes] You know my dad was the very first in IHRA history to win two classes at the same event, so to be able to make some of my own history and win an unprecedented three in a single event is something that I am extremely proud of."

"It was just a fantastic weekend for the team," he pointed out. "Pat [Forster] and his son Will, Deon Walker, who is a student in High Performance at UNOH, plus mom and dad. Mom takes care of me and hands me water and an iced down wash cloth and dad is pouring over the cars to make sure they are staying mechanically in shape and just letting me just drive."

"The products we use have a lot to do with our success," he added. "Of course there were some rounds in the Hot Rod car, but when you think about the dragster being hot lapped like it was between two different classes and twelve runs in a short amount of time, we can't have something breaking, if we can help it. All our cars, not just the Monza and the Racetech dragster but also the Vette Roadster and the American dragster all use K&N filters. We've used other products and with K&N filters we know what we get every time we take one out of the box. Others we used many years ago would collapse, you would have a hard time getting them off and you just don't have any of that with K&N's wrench-off oil filters. We use the same [HP-3002] on each car."

"The K&N composite scoops that we added to the cars early last year are just fantastic," he continued. "They all look super with the carbon fiber, they're light and strong plus with the special air filter that K&N has designed for each one, they are made to flow air for larger motors like we run and we don't have to worry about dust or anything else getting into our motors when we have rounds to win."

And in Jacob's case, with three shiny new Ironman trophies for his mantel, more like races. Thanks to his superb showing at the IHRA Nitro Jam in Grand Bend, he has also earned two spots in the Summit Racing Equipment Tournament of Champions in Quick Rod and Hot Rod where he will have a shot to run for World Championships in the classes later this fall at the IHRA season finale in Memphis, Tennessee.

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.