The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY THIS FEMALE STUDENT DRIVES MONSTER TRUCKS

19-year-old will make her first appearance in Atlanta this weekend.

- By Helena Oliviero holiviero@ajc.com

Rosalee Ramer is the youngest female profession­al monster truck driver in the country. She is also a mechanical engineerin­g student at Georgia Tech.

The 19-year-old sophomore from Watsonvill­e, California, has been around monster trucks since she was a toddler. At the age of 3, Ramer began helping her dad, Kelvin Ramer, a Monster Truck driver, work on engines by shining a flashlight so he could see. By 14, she was driving monster trucks profession­ally.

This Saturday and Sunday, Ramer will compete in the Monster Jam show at the Georgia Dome. This will mark the first time the racer will perform in Atlanta. (See below for more informatio­n).

She will be catching big air on jumps, turning donuts and crushing cars with her truck, “Wild Flower,” coated in dark blue with splashes of hot pink and neon green. Her truck weighs 10,000 pounds and features 66-inch tires.

“I love anything with horsepower but what really gets me with monster trucks is the connection we have with the fans,” she said in a recent interviews.

Monster Jams, considered the world’s premier profession­al monster truck racing circuit, are racing competitio­ns featuring loud, massive, powerful trucks. It’s an event for those who love to hear engines roar and watch huge vehicles perform tricks and aerial stunts. Each Monster Jam truck is over 10 feet tall and stretches 17 feet long. A Monster Jam engine

will generate 1,500 horsepower, thanks to a blower that forces air and fuel into the engine.

These trucks can also fly up to 30 feet in the air. Drivers in each event are scored on racing, wheelies and freestyle categories. Stunts include the “sky wheelie’’ and the “slap wheelie,” a freestyle trick performed when a truck is jumped over an obstacle and the front wheels bounce off the ground when it lands (hence, the slap).

Ramer is currently in 8th place in the field of competitio­n. Among her competitor­s is her dad, who currently ranks 13th.

As a full-time student at Georgia Tech, Ramer sets up her spring class schedule strategica­lly so she can jet off on weekends to race in shows across the country. She estimates she competes in about 25 competitio­ns a year.

She loves competing and performing wheelies, especially the “slap wheelie.”

Meanwhile, the racing aspect remains challengin­g.

“Racing — that is a mental game and it’s about being smooth and consistent,” she said.

As far as competing against her dad, she said, “We push each other and if either of us wins, we are happy for the other person.”

Monster Jam events typically start with a pre-show Pit Party, which gives fans the opportunit­y to meet the drivers and get autographs or pictures. Ramer said she loves interactin­g with fans and being able to help girls realize “they can do whatever they want to do.” There are 104 Monster Jam Truck competitor­s this season, and Ramer said 12 are women.

While Ramer has no plans to stop competing in monster truck competitio­ns, she has not yet decided on a career after college, only that she is confident it will be in the automotive industry.

“We’ll see what kind of job I do and it has to be something I love to do. I know I always want something with a lot of horsepower in my life,” said Ramer, who drives a 2014 Jeep Ranger with 42-inch wheels at home in California.

Meanwhile, Ramer raves about her college experience at Georgia Tech, and she enjoys applying what she is learning in class in her profession as a monster truck driver.

“I am taking a statics class, which is basically a physics class where all the forces are in equilibriu­m. It’s also the type of physics which allows us to calculate breaking points, and applied loads. Which is making me think about the way my truck breaks in a more technical way,” she said.

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FELD ENTERTAINM­ENT Rosalee Ramer, a Georgia Tech student, is the youngest female profession­al monster truck driver in the country.
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Rosalee Ramer
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