StandOnIt
Farm Truck
I'm glad that it looks like a done deal to get the composite bodies in cup
To think the truck series still uses sheet metal... They need composite bodies the most, especially with the sponsorship crunch most are feeling at this time.I'm glad that it looks like a done deal to get the composite bodies in cup
The Bob Pockrass tweet is phrased as if it's all a done deal... spec chassis as well as composite bodies... "Teams will be buying 2021 car chassis and body (composite body, like the Xfinity cars) and other parts and pieces from vendors."I'm glad that it looks like a done deal to get the composite bodies in cup
The Bob Pockrass tweet is phrased as if it's all a done deal... spec chassis as well as composite bodies... "Teams will be buying 2021 car chassis and body (composite body, like the Xfinity cars) and other parts and pieces from vendors."
All other reporting to date has said these things are being considered but nothing is yet final. I wonder if Pockrass is breaking a scoop, or maybe just careless in how he phrased his tweet? No other media outlets are reporting what Pockrass said, AFAIK. But regardless of whether final decisions have been made, it certainly seems the tide is shifting toward both spec chassis and composite bodies.
Hope it’s proper to post this here. Yikes.
Hope it’s proper to post this here. Yikes.
Hope it’s proper to post this here. Yikes.
I mean, do we really need pit stops in ARCA or K&N?
Out of all of them Pockrass to me is the most honest and reliable source with Stern a close second. I read a long time ago they were thinking about a spec chassis, Penske was talking about the outlandish costs of suspension uprights and driveshafts etc around the first of this year, but I haven't heard too much about the composite bodies until Pockrass tweeted it. I guess Delarta will be making the chassis. Pretty sobering when Penske said it costs around 3 million for a season of Indycar compared to 16 million or more for a cup car. Sure I doubt it will ever be that cheap for a cup car, but there is plenty of wiggle room between 3 and 16 million.
The solution to that is to run Xfinity, but that won't happen until the payouts increase at the lower levels. As long as a team can get a better return for running at the bottom of Cup vs top 10 in X, there will be teams willing to run around at the back at minimum speed.small teams have a chance to get their feet wet without the huge A Cup investment,
Hard for any new team to compete with teams using cup drivers and teams.The solution to that is to run Xfinity, but that won't happen until the payouts increase at the lower levels. As long as a team can get a better return for running at the bottom of Cup vs top 10 in X, there will be teams willing to run around at the back at minimum speed.
The car from 2016-2018 did that same exact thing.
I'm not understanding how that is groundbreaking when the previous packages did that same exact deal. Some guys struggled passing on the inside and sometimes air was taken off of that left rear quarter panel causing occasional spins.
Now, going into 2021 with the new car will do the same exact thing without taking air off of the car on the outside or inside car getting loose. I'm unsure about the end goal with this because it sounds like a literal circle NASCAR has already been through.
This is all interesting, I'm extremely curious about the finished product. Yet, I can't help but feel this will be another high-downforce car...
lol this fake Moody account is something else
Only thing gen 7 about this test car are the 18” wheels and the chassis.
And it sounds like they are moving to a single lugthat was my understanding also. But current cup car bodies don't have venting on the hood and those two gizmo's below it in the engine compartment or a rear diffuser.
Maybe 4-man pit crew... gasman, jackman, and two tire changers who carry their own tires. (If Nascar gets rid of 5-lug wheels, you can thank Tony Stewart for bringing it about.)Lol single lug. Those damn lug nuts are expensive I tell ya!!