Street Machine

GRAND DESIGNS

> WE CHAT TO 25-YEAR-OLD DESIGNER AND FABRICATOR DEAN FIUMARA, RECIPIENT OF THE LAURIE STARLING SCHOLARSHI­P FOR 2023

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THE Laurie Starling Memorial Scholarshi­p Award began in 2015 as a way to financiall­y assist up-andcoming young car fabricator­s and designers and help them further their careers. Named in honour of the late car crafter and Street Machine Summernats judge Laurie Starling, the scholarshi­p comprises $4000 as well as a heap of tools and equipment from Milwaukee.

This year’s scholarshi­p was awarded to 25-year-old Sydneyside­r Dean Fiumara, in recognitio­n of his efforts with his fledgling design company, 3DFX Engineerin­g, where he has worked on projects for PAC Performanc­e, Memphis Hell, Lowe Fabricatio­ns, Empire Elite Performanc­e Parts and many more.

The award also considered Dean’s work as a fabricator and designer for Lowe Fabricatio­ns. Our recent cover car KING GRP A, Ray Elia’s wildly modded VN Commodore SS Group A tribute (SM, Dec ’22), was crafted by Lowe Fabricatio­ns and bristles with Dean’s CAD and 3D-printing handiwork, from suspension and brake bits to fuel line clamps.

We caught up with Dean to find out more about his automotive journey so far.

How did you get into cars, Dean?

Pretty much through family; my uncle Frank is a mechanic. [When I would be] hanging around with him and my cousin while they were building engines, they got me into cleaning the parts. I was only maybe eight or 10. To be honest, I was so new to it all – cars were nothing to me!

When was the lightbulb moment?

At high school. I was thinking about mechanics, but my parents wanted me to look a bit further, so I looked into mechanical engineerin­g. It appealed to me as it was the most hands-on and the most related to automotive. I did try other fields; for instance, I tried electrical, but I didn’t enjoy it as much. While I was doing that, I was doing an AUTOCAD course at another TAFE; I really enjoyed it and started mucking around with it and learning more about it at home. I got a good break with Damien Lowe of Lowe Fabricatio­ns. I’d finished school and needed a job to help me get through university. I have a mate who works a couple of doors down from Damien, so I had him ask if Damien would be willing to take me on so I could learn more about cars and the scene. He was more than happy; that turned into a part-time job helping around the workshop.

There’s some cool stuff on the Lowe Fabricatio­ns-built KING GRP A – including components you made yourself.

Yeah, there’s a few 3D-printed parts on that car. I like to model something and then 3D-print it before we commit to machining or manufactur­e to make sure things work or fit the way they should with no mistakes. That’s the process for doing things properly, I reckon.

So where do you want to be in five years?

I get asked that quite a lot! Truth is, I’m not sure. Of course, I’m going to continue with the CAD and 3D printing, but there are so many fields with plenty of different skillsets, so I’ll probably dip my toes into a few different things. I’m working with 3D scanning right now; it’s a fresh and growing field that not everyone understand­s.

And now the big question: are you Holden, Ford or Mopar?

Datsun, actually! I have a little Datsun 1200 ute that I’m building with a 13B turbo [Mazda rotary]. It started out simple – just some little wheel tubs and a nice engine – but it’s grown from there. I wanted it finished by the end of this year, but really, looking at all the things that need to be done to get it finished, I think the year after is more sensible.

 ?? ?? ABOVE: Dean modelled a stack of trick interior goodies for the Showtime FMX pro touring Chev C10
ABOVE: Dean modelled a stack of trick interior goodies for the Showtime FMX pro touring Chev C10
 ?? ?? BELOW: A slick intake manifold that Dean designed for Lamspeed Racing’s record-setting Toyota GR Yaris
BELOW: A slick intake manifold that Dean designed for Lamspeed Racing’s record-setting Toyota GR Yaris

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