Bud Moore Engineering

Championship-winning NASCAR team


title: "Bud Moore Engineering" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["auto-racing-teams-established-in-1961", "auto-racing-teams-disestablished-in-2001", "companies-based-in-south-carolina", "defunct-nascar-teams", "american-auto-racing-teams", "defunct-companies-based-in-south-carolina", "2001-disestablishments-in-north-carolina", "companies-based-in-spartanburg,-south-carolina"] description: "Championship-winning NASCAR team" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bud_Moore_Engineering" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Championship-winning NASCAR team ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox former NASCAR team"]

FieldValue
nameBud Moore Engineering
logo[[File:Bud_Moore_Engineering.png
ownersBud Moore
Robert, Sue and Randy Fenley
seriesGrand National/Winston Cup
drivers_champ2
wins63
driversJoe Weatherly, Buddy Baker, David Pearson, Bobby Allison, Dale Earnhardt, Benny Parsons, Ricky Rudd, Lake Speed, Geoff Bodine
manufacturerFord/Mercury/Pontiac
baseSpartanburg, South Carolina
opened1961
closed2001
::

| name = Bud Moore Engineering | logo = [[File:Bud_Moore_Engineering.png|center|200px]] | owners = Bud Moore Robert, Sue and Randy Fenley | series = Grand National/Winston Cup | drivers_champ = 2 | wins = 63 | drivers = Joe Weatherly, Buddy Baker, David Pearson, Bobby Allison, Dale Earnhardt, Benny Parsons, Ricky Rudd, Lake Speed, Geoff Bodine | manufacturer = Ford/Mercury/Pontiac | base = Spartanburg, South Carolina | opened = 1961 | closed = 2001 Bud Moore Engineering, later Fenley-Moore Racing, was a championship-winning NASCAR team. It was owned and operated by mechanic Bud Moore and ran out of Spartanburg, South Carolina. While the team was a dominant force in the 1960s and 1980s, the final years were tumultuous due to lack of sponsorship and uncompetitive race cars. The team's numbers are 01, 06, 08, 1, 8, 15, 16, and 62.

History

1960s

Bud Moore Engineering debuted in 1961, at a qualifying race for the Daytona 500. The team won its debut with Joe Weatherly driving the No. 8 Pontiac. Weatherly drove for the team for most of the season, and won eight races. Bud Moore Engineering became one of the first multi-car teams in NASCAR history, fielding the No. 18 for five races. Bob Welborn, Fireball Roberts, Cotton Owens, and Tommy Irwin drove that car.

In 1962, Weatherly returned and had a phenomenal year, winning five races and that year's Grand National championship. David Pearson drove the second car(No. 08) at Atlanta Motor Speedway, finishing 11th.

1963 saw Weatherly and Moore repeating as champions, despite winning only three races and running just over half of the schedule. Welborn returned to the second car(No. 06) at Charlotte Motor Speedway, finishing 29th,

Weatherly was considering retirement going into 1964, and he drove only a couple of races for Moore, until tragedy struck. While racing Moore's No. 8 Mercury at Riverside International Raceway, Weatherly began setting up for Turn 6 when he lost control and struck the concrete barrier, then slid across the racetrack where his car came to a stop. Weatherly was dead when workers got to his car. He died when his car hit the barrier, as his head slid out the window and hit the wall, suffering major head injuries. Moore retired No. 8 and switched to No. 1, and hired Billy Wade, the 1963 NASCAR Rookie of the Year, to drive. Wade had a strong year, winning four consecutive races and finishing fourth in points. Bobby Johns, Johnny Rutherford, and Darel Dieringer also saw time in the car, with Dieringer winning at Augusta Speedway.

Wade himself died in a tire test at Daytona International Speedway. Moore retired No. 1 and fielded the Nos. 15 and 16 for Earl Balmer and Dieringer, respectively. Dieringer had another win and a third-place points finish, while Balmer had three top-fives. After that season, Moore cut down to Dieringer's car and ran a limited schedule, with Dieringer nailing down two more victories.

At the end of the season, Dieringer moved on and Moore had a rotation of drivers in his No. 16, Bobby Allison, Gordon Johncock, Sam McQuagg, Cale Yarborough, and LeeRoy Yarbrough all drove, most of whom finished in the top-ten one. In 1968, Cale returned for one race, and Tiny Lund drove for thirteen races, finishing in the top ten seven times. BME only ran one race in 1969, with Don Schissler finishing 36th at the inaugural Talladega 500.

1970s

Bud Moore Engineering took a three-year hiatus until 1972, when David Pearson piloted the No. 15 Ford to a 26th-place finish at Riverside. LeeRoy Yarbrough, Dick Brooks, and Donnie Allison also drove that year. In 1973, Bobby Isaac climbed on board with Sta-Power Industries sponsoring. Isaac had six top-ten finishes until the Talladega 500, when he radioed in to Moore and told him he was quitting. When he got out of the car, Isaac announced he was retiring. Some reports surfaced saying Isaac quit because voices in his head had told him to. His replacement was an unpolished rookie named Darrell Waltrip, who had a top-ten at Darlington Raceway.

In 1974, George Follmer drove the car with R.C. Cola as sponsor, but was released after Riverside, and Buddy Baker drove for the rest of the year, and won two poles. Baker stayed on for 1975, and won four races and finished 15th in the championship standings. Baker won one race in 1976 and finished seventh in the points, but did not visit victory lane in 1977. He left at the end of the year.

Baker's replacement was Bobby Allison. Allison won five races each over the next two seasons, including the 1978 Daytona 500, and finished second and third in the points, respectively. By the end of the 1970s, Bud Moore Engineering had returned to prominence.

1980s

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/58/RickyRudd15NASCAR1984.jpg" caption="Rudd in Moore's No. 15, from 1984"] ::

After Allison won four races in 1980 and finished sixth in points, he left for other opportunities. He was replaced by Benny Parsons, who won three races and finished tenth in points. He too, decided to move on after that season. Moore hit paydirt in 1982 by hiring a hotshot young superstar named Dale Earnhardt and signed Wrangler Jeans as primary sponsor. Earnhardt had one win in his first year, and finished 12th in points. After only improving slightly the next year, Earnhardt departed for Richard Childress Racing, and was replaced by Ricky Rudd (who was driving the No. 3 Childress car that Earnhardt was going to be driving, both with the same Wrangler sponsorship). After a demoralizing start that resulted in Rudd flipping over several times in a crash in the Bud Shootout, Rudd won at Richmond and finished seventh in points. Armed with new sponsor Motorcraft, Rudd won five more races from 1985 to 1987, and had a best points finish of fifth.

After 1987, Rudd departed for King Racing, rookie Brett Bodine replaced him. Compared to the teams' previous success, Bodine's performance was disappointing, and he left to replace Rudd at King.

1990s

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e3/BrettBodine15car1989.jpg" caption="Bud Moore's car, as driven by [[Brett Bodine]] in 1989"] ::

In 1990, Moore chose Morgan Shepherd to be his new driver. Shepherd had a strong year, winning the Atlanta Journal 500 and finishing a career-best fifth in points. When Shepherd dropped seven points in the standings in 1991, he left for Wood Brothers Racing, and Moore selected Geoff Bodine, older brother of Moore's former driver Brett, to be his new pilot. Despite two wins and eleven top-ten finishes, Bodine finished just 16th in points. Bodine won Moore's last race in 1993 at Sears Point, which was one of Bodine's last races for the team as he purchased the late Alan Kulwicki's AK Racing team five days prior to this victory and was going to become an owner-driver, and took over that car at Dover in September of that year. Lake Speed, who had been announced as the new driver for 1994 on September 3, 1993, took over for Bodine at that Dover race, and his best finish was an 11th at the Mello Yello 500.

Speed returned in 1994, this time with Ford as the sponsor. He had four top five finishes and an eleventh-place finish in points. At the end of the year, Speed departed for Melling Racing, and popular veteran Dick Trickle took over. After a dismal season that yielded just one top-ten, Trickle left the team. Wally Dallenbach Jr. signed on with Hayes Communications in 1996, but only had three top-ten finishes. He and Hayes left the team at the end of the year.

Final years

After the disappointment of 1996, Bud Moore Engineering did not make a race in 1997, when an attempt to make the Daytona 500 with Larry Pearson failed. In 1998, Moore began developing three-time ARCA champion Tim Steele for a run at Winston Cup with sponsorship from Nike and Sony. Steele had been recovering from injuries sustained in a crash at Atlanta, and with the help of his father and sponsor Rescue Engine Formula, Steele would seek Rookie of the Year honors in 1999. Soon though, the deal fell apart. Loy Allen Jr. attempted the Brickyard 400, but failed to qualify. The team did start two races with Ted Musgrave, both races resulting in DNF's.

After a failed attempt with Jeff Green to qualify for the 1999 Daytona 500, Moore was approached by a California family, Robert, Sue, and Randy Fenley, who were operating a successful NASCAR West Coast team and wanted to expand into Cup. Moore sold the operation to them but remained on board as a consultant. They attempted their first race at that year's Brickyard 400 as the No. 62 with Big Daddy's BBQ Sauce as sponsor. Jeff Davis and Lance Hooper shared the driving duties, but they did not qualify for the race. Nevertheless, the team began preparing for 2000. Late in the year, the team announced they would hire Derrike Cope would drive the No. 15 until the end of 2001. Although no sponsor was named, the team assured Cope that there was enough financial stability for him to run for the entirety of his contract. Cope qualified at Lowe's Motor Speedway for the team in 1999, finishing 35th. Things looked promising for 2000, as Cope had a strong Speedweeks. However, the team soon started to skip races because of financial difficulties. Things went from bad to worse as Moore left the team. Soon afterwards, Cope quit the team in disgust because he felt that he was lied to when he was told the organization was financially secure. Musgrave drove at Talladega and finished 35th. After that, the team moved to North Carolina and hoped to run the ARCA series until they could afford to compete in NASCAR again. That never came to be and the team soon shut down and sold its equipment. Moore's old shop in Spartanburg was purchased by Converse College as a storage facility. Years later a fire broke out in the building and burned most of the old shop down.

Car Results (Modern Era)

Car No. 15 Results

::data[format=table]

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series resultsYearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334OwnersPts1972David Pearson15FordunknownLeeRoy YarbroughDonnie AllisonDick Brooks1973Bobby IsaacunknownDarrell Waltrip1974George FollmerunknownBuddy Baker197515th305019767th374519775th39611978Bobby Allison2nd436719793rd463319806th4019Mercury1981Benny ParsonsFord10th34491982Dale Earnhardt12th340219838th37321984Ricky Rudd7th391819856th385719865th382319876th37421988Brett Bodine20th2828198919th30511990Morgan Shepherd6th3689199112th34381992Geoff Bodine16th3437199314th3452Lake Speed199412th35651995Dick Trickle25th28751996Wally Dallenbach Jr.25th27861997Larry Pearson60th56Greg Sacks1998Loy Allen Jr.58th99Ted Musgrave1999Jeff Green56th93Derrike Cope200049th318Ted Musgrave
RSD
26DAYRCHONTCARATL
4BRI
DAR
26NWSMARTAL
CLT
34DOVMCH
33RSDTWSDAY
8BRITRNATL
32TALMCHNSVDAR
38RCHDOVMARNWSCLT
25
CAR
34TWS
RSD
27DAY
2RCH
4CAR
30BRI
15ATL
2NWS
28DAR
33MAR
3TAL
26NSV
7CLT
4DOV
29TWS
32RSD
33MCHDAY
39BRI
22ATL
35TAL
13NSV
DAR
8RCH
26DOVNWS
30MARCLT
38CAR
27
RSD
18DAY
20RCHCAR
5BRI
28ATL
4DAR
22NWS
6MAR
22TAL
28NSV
6DOV
5
CLT
22RSDMCH
30DAY
3BRI
2NSV
25ATL
3POC
2TAL
6*MCH
4DAR
33RCHDOV
2NWS
3MAR
2CLT
37CAR
34ONT
5
RSDDAY
20RCHCAR
25BRI
3ATL
2NWS
3DAR
19MAR
19TAL
1*NSVDOV
11CLT
5RSDMCHDAY
2*NSVPOC
3TAL
1*MCH
6DAR
28DOV
33NWS
4MAR
18CLT
3RCHCAR
28BRI
24ATL
1*ONT
1*
RSD
28DAY
33CAR
4RCH
29BRI
21ATL
25NWS
26DAR
2*MAR
27TAL
1*NSV
4DOV
5CLT
28RSD
5MCH
5DAY
35NSV
23*POC
2TAL
2*MCH
31BRI
5DAR
31RCH
5DOV
5MAR
3NWS
4CLT
4*CAR
28ATL
5ONT
39
RSD
12DAY
3RCH
9CAR
4ATL
5NWS
4DAR
7BRI
29MAR
24TAL
33NSV
6DOV
9CLT
5RSD
5MCH
6DAY
7NSV
6POC
27TAL
6MCH
30BRI
15DAR
3RCH
27DOV
6MAR
21NWS
9CLT
4CAR
29ATL
7ONT
4
RSD
30DAY
1RCH
6CAR
2ATL
1*BRI
21DAR
14NWS
6MAR
6TAL
38DOV
8CLT
3NSV
21RSD
3MCH
24DAY
27NSV
7POC
3TAL
6MCH
5BRI
22DAR
5RCH
2DOV
1*MAR
7NWS
3CLT
1*CAR
2ATL
6ONT
1*
RSD
19DAY
11CAR
1*RCH
2*ATL
2*NWS
1BRI
2DAR
26MAR
4TAL
1NSV
3DOV
4CLT
22TWS
2RSD
1MCH
7DAY
30NSV
16POC
9TAL
28MCH
23BRI
3DAR
10RCH
1*DOV
6MAR
4CLT
2NWS
2*CAR
19ATL
4ONT
2
RSD
18RCH
2CAR
7ATL
3BRI
3DAR
30NWS
3MAR
25NSV
5DOV
1TWS
3RSD
15*MCH
8NSV
6POC
34BRI
6DAR
6RCH
1*DOV
30NWS
1*MAR
22CAR
26ONT
4
DAY
2TAL
40CLT
26DAY
1*TAL
35MCH
7CLT
29ATL
38
RSD
16DAY
31RCH
5CAR
24ATL
5BRI
5NWS
21DAR
5MAR
23TAL
36NSV
1DOV
32CLT
37TWS
1RSD
20MCH
3DAY
39NSV
3POC
3TAL
13MCH
26BRI
6DAR
39RCH
1DOV
34MAR
24NWS
29CLT
38CAR
6ATL
36RSD
27
DAY
36RCH
4BRI
2*ATL
28*CAR
25DAR
1*NWS
3MAR
23TAL
8NSV
10DOV
3CLT
30*POC
34RSD
4MCH
7DAY
29NSV
9POC
25TAL
35MCH
30BRI
6DAR
3RCH
27DOV
20NWS
20CLT
25MAR
27CAR
14ATL
34RSD
42
DAY
35RCH
2CAR
33ATL
33DAR
13NWS
29MAR
26TAL
24NSV
24DOV
8BRI
9CLT
5RSD
4POC
8MCH
15DAY
9NSV
1*POC
30TAL
1*MCH
7BRI
2DAR
11RCH
22DOV
35MAR
4NWS
2CLT
14CAR
17ATL
33RSD
4
DAY
7RCH
1CAR
7ATL
8BRI
6NWS
3*DAR
9MAR
18TAL
22NSV
4DOV
8CLT
11RSD
9POC
18MCH
40DAY
15NSV
16POC
39TAL
14MCH
12BRI
16DAR
5RCH
2DOV
3MAR
27CLT
8NWS
6CAR
23ATL
3RSD
15
DAY
5RCH
25CAR
32ATL
4BRI
2DAR
25NWS
4MAR
2TAL
5DOV
4CLT
13RSD
4POC
7MCH
7DAY
7POC
14TAL
18MCH
31BRI
9DAR
6RCH
5DOV
3MAR
4NWS
5CLT
15CAR
7ATL
31RSD
1
DAY
11RCH
30CAR
28ATL
26BRI
2DAR
26NWS
2MAR
1*TAL
36DOV
4CLT
8RSD
3POC
4MCH
10DAY
6POC
2TAL
3GLN
7MCH
21BRI
23DAR
6RCH
24*DOV
1*MAR
28NWS
7CLT
4CAR
2ATL
25RSD
19
DAY
9CAR
2RCH
28ATL
1DAR
30NWS
5BRI
3MAR
16TAL
30CLT
25DOV
12POC
7RSD
2MCH
14DAY
14POC
26TAL
15GLN
4MCH
25BRI
3DAR
7RCH
3DOV
1*MAR
21NWS
13CLT
11CAR
31RSD
31ATL
3
DAY
35RCH
27CAR
27ATL
9DAR
15BRI
17NWS
13MAR
27TAL
19CLT
4DOV
31RSD
40POC
35MCH
27DAY
42POC
20TAL
28GLN
23MCH
6BRI
25DAR
17RCH
11DOV
22MAR
10CLT
3NWS
17CAR
29PHO
43ATL
27
DAY
29CAR
34ATL
33RCH
28DAR
14BRI
30NWS
28MAR
27TAL
19CLT
8DOV
15SON
27POC
10MCH
5DAY
11POC
10TAL
14GLN
15MCH
36BRI
17DAR
16RCH
34DOV
9MAR
7CLT
12NWS
17CAR
21PHO
19ATL
23
DAY
10RCH
7CAR
7ATL
2DAR
5BRI
8NWS
5MAR
3TAL
8CLT
8DOV
6SON
29POC
11MCH
13DAY
34POC
36TAL
26GLN
6MCH
9BRI
31DAR
21RCH
30DOV
25MAR
25NWS
12CLT
2CAR
12PHO
3ATL
1
DAY
34RCH
8CAR
10ATL
4DAR
8BRI
10NWS
4MAR
30TAL
14CLT
14DOV
8SON
42POC
9MCH
9DAY
20POC
34TAL
14GLN
36MCH
26BRI
6DAR
19RCH
23DOV
3MAR
11NWS
3CLT
28CAR
17PHO
10ATL
6
DAY
3CAR
14RCH
16ATL
6DAR
8BRI
12NWS
4MAR
32TAL
13CLT
32DOV
17SON
10POC
14MCH
11DAY
4POC
30TAL
38GLN
27MCH
40BRI
11DAR
19RCH
5DOV
14MAR
1NWS
1*CLT
10CAR
35PHO
39ATL
3
DAY
3CAR
9RCH
12ATL
6DAR
8BRI
18NWS
28MAR
6TAL
27SON
1CLT
10DOV
23POC
24MCH
17DAY
37NHA
12POC
12TAL
16GLN
16MCH
24BRI
8DAR
20RCH
34
DOV
33MAR
24NWS
17CLT
11CAR
16PHO
13ATL
26
DAY
14CAR
21RCH
14ATL
6DAR
5BRI
3NWS
12MAR
30TAL
7SON
32CLT
14DOV
12POC
23MCH
40DAY
10NHA
15POC
20TAL
14IND
15GLN
13MCH
13BRI
25DAR
40RCH
21DOV
9MAR
34NWS
25CLT
5CAR
10PHO
14ATL
4
DAY
11CAR
22RCH
12ATL
22DAR
28BRI
30NWS
32MAR
24TAL
38SON
24CLT
16DOV
32POC
22MCH
16DAY
12NHA
34POC
10TAL
38IND
18GLN
28MCH
13BRI
35DAR
36RCH
18DOV
23MAR
15NWS
19CLT
32CAR
16PHO
29ATL
23
DAY
6CAR
23RCH
40ATL
20DAR
37BRI
24NWS
28MAR
DNQTAL
12SON
3CLT
19DOV
22POC
12MCH
13DAY
12NHA
18POC
33TAL
32IND
17GLN
10MCH
34BRI
25DAR
25RCH
33DOV
29MAR
22NWS
34CLT
33CAR
36PHO
15ATL
40
DAY
DNQCARRCHATLDARTEXBRIMARSONTALCLTDOVPOCMCHCALDAYNHAPOCINDGLNMCHBRIDARRCHNHADOVMAR
CLT
DNQTALCARPHOATL
DAYCARLVSATLDARBRITEXMARTALCALCLTDOVRCHMCHPOCSONNHAPOCIND
DNQGLN
MCH
39BRINHADAR
43RCHDOVMARCLTTALDAYPHOCARATL
DAY
DNQCARLVSATLDARTEXBRIMARTALCALRCHCLTDOVMCHPOCSONDAYNHAPOCINDGLNMCHBRIDARRCHNHADOVMAR
CLT
35TALCARPHOHOMATL
DNQ
DAY
41CARLVS
37ATL
19DAR
DNQBRITEXMAR
TAL
35CALRCHCLT
DNQDOVMCHPOCSONDAYNHAPOCINDGLNMCHBRIDARRCHNHADOVMARCLTTALCARPHOHOMATL
::

;Footnotes:

References

References

  1. Caraviello, David. (April 29, 2009). "In former hub of NASCAR, now only memories remain". [[NASCAR]].
  2. Snipes, Anisa. (2024-04-30). "Fire destroys former Bud Moore Engineering building in Spartanburg".

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