Bo-Dyn Bobsled Project

Its sleds are built in NASCAR Cup Series driver Joey Logano's Huntersville, North Carolina race shop.

[3] Geoff Bodine was watching the 1992 Winter Olympics when he noticed the American team struggling in the bobsled event.

At the time, the United States had not won an Olympic bobsled medal since 1956, and was using substandard sleds imported from Europe.

Bodine had recently purchased the assets of AK Racing, and used his leverage and connections as a NASCAR car owner to begin fundraising for the project.

The project, known as Bo-Dyn ("Bo" for Bodine, "Dyn" for Chassis Dynamics), started having its sleds used by the U.S. team in 1994.

Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah (USA), the team won three bobsled medals:[6] a gold in the women's competition, and silver and bronze in the four-man sled.

To know the whole country was cheering for them felt pretty darn special.On April 30, 2011, Bo-Dyn and the USBSF ended its partnership due to intellectual property disagreements, and BMW became the new bobsled provider.

[13] Bo-Dyn served as Bodine's sponsor in the E-Z-GO 200 Camping World Truck Series race in 2010.

The American bobsled team pushing the "Night Train" sled in the 2010 Winter Olympics