Spotter22
Team Owner
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- Aug 17, 2017
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Right, just like everyone said the new pit gun would ruin everything and it was defective.This time it will be the car shortage right? lol.
Right, just like everyone said the new pit gun would ruin everything and it was defective.This time it will be the car shortage right? lol.
You're exactly right and people are naive to think that no manipulation will be attempted. In regards to tolerancing, not just on the bodies, but even on say control arms... every manufactured part has a tolerance. Is anything stopping the big teams from buying five times as many control arms as needed, and then measuring each one to choose the ones that create a hair more camber than the rest of the batch? I think you'll see a lot of that now. Just because there's a spec shock now too, doesn't mean teams are going to throw their shock dynos away. Dyno a bunch and choose the ones you like best because not every shock is identical in performance even when they're the same model/part number. People have already been doing this in late models with spec shocks for years. Now the shock budget goes from making your own to constantly buying, testing, and sorting. Spec parts create savings in theory but also open a whole new can of worms in the process. It's just how racing is, and money will always prevail like that.But it's not rigid and you're given a tolerance when it comes to finished product. Does anyone honestly think the big teams are just going to bolt things on without finding the best way to bolt them on? If you're given a 0.030" tolerance and +.030" is better than -.030" I am willing to bet teams find a way to get it +.030". Seriously these are the same guys that figured out what angle you want to run the wiper blade at in dry weather and tried cutting slits in the wraps to manipulate the airflow. If there's an advantage these guys will find it.
Correct, the diffusers are a no-no for modificationAre the diffusers a no touch zone? Wondering because of Penske and Haas involvement in open wheel and working with diffusers before.
Thank you!Correct, the diffusers are a no-no for modification
That's exactly what I was getting at. However some people don't seem to agree.....You're exactly right and people are naive to think that no manipulation will be attempted. In regards to tolerancing, not just on the bodies, but even on say control arms... every manufactured part has a tolerance. Is anything stopping the big teams from buying five times as many control arms as needed, and then measuring each one to choose the ones that create a hair more camber than the rest of the batch? I think you'll see a lot of that now. Just because there's a spec shock now too, doesn't mean teams are going to throw their shock dynos away. Dyno a bunch and choose the ones you like best because not every shock is identical in performance even when they're the same model/part number. People have already been doing this in late models with spec shocks for years. Now the shock budget goes from making your own to constantly buying, testing, and sorting. Spec parts create savings in theory but also open a whole new can of worms in the process. It's just how racing is, and money will always prevail like that.
Camber is measured at the hub / wheel interface.You're exactly right and people are naive to think that no manipulation will be attempted. In regards to tolerancing, not just on the bodies, but even on say control arms... every manufactured part has a tolerance. Is anything stopping the big teams from buying five times as many control arms as needed, and then measuring each one to choose the ones that create a hair more camber than the rest of the batch? I think you'll see a lot of that now. Just because there's a spec shock now too, doesn't mean teams are going to throw their shock dynos away. Dyno a bunch and choose the ones you like best because not every shock is identical in performance even when they're the same model/part number. People have already been doing this in late models with spec shocks for years. Now the shock budget goes from making your own to constantly buying, testing, and sorting. Spec parts create savings in theory but also open a whole new can of worms in the process. It's just how racing is, and money will always prevail like that.
Some people know one end of a combination wrench from the other.That's exactly what I was getting at. However some people don't seem to agree.....
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They're using shims as the intended means of camber adjustment, but if the holes machined in the control arms are located slightly different from one another, which they will be based on tolerancing, then it will affect the location of the balljoints and could offer a slight advantage if you find one that's on one end of the tolerance banding versus the others when going for max camber. I'm talking small advantages here, but any advantage in a sea of small possible advantages will matter here. The teams aren't going to lay down and do nothing and just use every part as-is without trying to work stack-up tolerances to their benefit.Camber is measured at the hub / wheel interface.
It doesn’t matter if a team has magic control arms.
Yeah, and every major team for years now has had all the same optical measuring systems in their own shops to find and sustain their builds at the limits and even find new gray-areas. The teams have just as much firepower as NASCAR and usually more. Why do you think NASCAR changes the rules around what the teams do, in a game of cat and mouse all the time?There are all kinds of adjustment areas built in to the car. It isn't rocket science. There are also very advanced measuring systems in place. Post 4630 shows a few areas.
At this level, CNC machined components intended to be exactly the same are subjected to rigorous, documented quality control checks at various points in the manufacturing process. We no longer tig-weld tubular steel control arms on the bench.... but if the holes machined in the control arms are located slightly different from one another, which they will be based on tolerancing, then it will affect the location of the balljoints and could offer a slight advantage if you find one that's on one end of the tolerance banding versus the others ...
There is no such thing as "exactly the same" in machining and it's laughable that you think CNCs eliminate deviation. Inspection of these next-gen parts will still have tolerancing, and thus some degree of variation, and that degree of variation probably won't be down to the millionths when you consider that these are supposed to be budget-friendly components now, with budget-friendly being a next-gen "fundamental design parameter" in and of itself.At this level, CNC machined components intended to be exactly the same are subjected to rigorous, documented quality control checks at various points in the manufacturing process. We no longer tig-weld tubular steel control arms on the bench.
I get where you’re coming from ... a place that Next Gen moves away from. That’s a fundamental design parameter.
I’m out ... The Chili Bowl awaits.
You do know there is zero modification allowed on any part that goes on this car. Zero. I'm not gonna tell you a machined part is identical but the CNC is remarkably close, within thousandths of and inch and they are inspected and controlled and if they dont fall within the template they are thrown out.There is no such thing as "exactly the same" in machining and it's laughable that you think CNCs eliminate deviation. Inspection of these next-gen parts will still have tolerancing, and thus some degree of variation, and that degree of variation probably won't be down to the millionths when you consider that these are supposed to be budget-friendly components now, with budget-friendly being a next-gen "fundamental design parameter" in and of itself.
I believe the standard parts built by outside vendors are sealed. Fooling with any of that means harsh penaltiesYou do know there is zero modification allowed on any part that goes on this car. Zero. I'm not gonna tell you a machined part is identical but the CNC is remarkably close, within thousandths of and inch and they are inspected and controlled and if they dont fall within the template they are thrown out.
He's saying the parts will have major amounts of tolerance. I disagree. The whole point in "spec" parts is they be the same. These cars have the capability of +/-6 degrees of camber. I can't imagine a situation where more would be desirable on pavement. Just gonna eat the tire. As for the body alignment...I'd bet they will still get basically same inspection as the Gen6. Not much way to cheat. And penalties will be HUGE!I believe the standard parts built by outside vendors are sealed. Fooling with any of that means harsh penalties
So JJ and Chad will still have the same pick of the crop like always. Oh wait, they have changed the names.I love it. On one hand, the teams can’t get enough parts to risk damaging a car in practice. On the other, they can get plenty enough that they can pick and choose which ones to use.
I believe eventually both will happen.I love it. On one hand, the teams can’t get enough parts to risk damaging a car in practice. On the other, they can get plenty enough that they can pick and choose which ones to use.
I know that Bubba had shoulder surgery, but I think that TRD and 23XI were eager to get Kurt some track time as well.Did Bubba test also? I haven't heard anything about him.
Yes, time will never allow for the situation to change, ever. We must always only have one or the other until the end of time.I love it. On one hand, the teams can’t get enough parts to risk damaging a car in practice. On the other, they can get plenty enough that they can pick and choose which ones to use.
I'm not saying the parts will have major amount of tolerance, I'm saying that the parts will still have tolerance though, and if you stack up several different favorable tolerances in any given assembly then it will and can alter the outcome of how that assembly functions. It's called stack-up and it affects ever assembly manufactured. I'm not speaking about some black art here, just common manufacturing senseHe's saying the parts will have major amounts of tolerance. I disagree. The whole point in "spec" parts is they be the same. These cars have the capability of +/-6 degrees of camber. I can't imagine a situation where more would be desirable on pavement. Just gonna eat the tire. As for the body alignment...I'd bet they will still get basically same inspection as the Gen6. Not much way to cheat. And penalties will be HUGE!
It's a whole new game, folks.
Re-read my post, I never once mentioned altering parts. I said that teams will measure and select the parts that best fit their performance goals because not every part will be exactly identical. Don't have any idea where you got the idea from that I was speaking about modifying any spec components.You do know there is zero modification allowed on any part that goes on this car. Zero. I'm not gonna tell you a machined part is identical but the CNC is remarkably close, within thousandths of and inch and they are inspected and controlled and if they dont fall within the template they are thrown out.
In my uneducated opinion, the teams will quickly find there isn't enough difference in the parts to affect the racing to the point where it's worth the expense of stacking them up.I said that teams will measure and select the parts that best fit their performance goals because not every part will be exactly identical.
Re-read my post, I never once mentioned altering parts. I said that teams will measure and select the parts that best fit their performance goals because not every part will be exactly identical. Don't have any idea where you got the idea from that I was speaking about modifying any spec components.
Oh wait! I meant... blah blah blah.Your Post -
You said-
"You're exactly right and people are naive to think that no manipulation will be attempted". In regards to tolerancing, not just on the bodies, but even on say control arms... every manufactured part has a tolerance. Is anything stopping the big teams from buying five times as many control arms as needed, and then measuring each one to choose the ones that create a hair more camber than the rest of the batch? I think you'll see a lot of that now. Just because there's a spec shock now too, doesn't mean teams are going to throw their shock dynos away. Dyno a bunch and choose the ones you like best because not every shock is identical in performance even when they're the same model/part number. People have already been doing this in late models with spec shocks for years. Now the shock budget goes from making your own to constantly buying, testing, and sorting. Spec parts create savings in theory but also open a whole new can of worms in the process. It's just how racing is, and money will always prevail like that.
Still didn't say anything about altering. Just manipulation of spec parts by stacking of tolerances in a favorable way.Your Post -
You said-
"You're exactly right and people are naive to think that no manipulation will be attempted". In regards to tolerancing, not just on the bodies, but even on say control arms... every manufactured part has a tolerance. Is anything stopping the big teams from buying five times as many control arms as needed, and then measuring each one to choose the ones that create a hair more camber than the rest of the batch? I think you'll see a lot of that now. Just because there's a spec shock now too, doesn't mean teams are going to throw their shock dynos away. Dyno a bunch and choose the ones you like best because not every shock is identical in performance even when they're the same model/part number. People have already been doing this in late models with spec shocks for years. Now the shock budget goes from making your own to constantly buying, testing, and sorting. Spec parts create savings in theory but also open a whole new can of worms in the process. It's just how racing is, and money will always prevail like that.
Semantics. The words that come before" Manipulation" in his sentence having meaning alsoStill didn't say anything about altering. Just manipulation of spec parts by stacking of tolerances in a favorable way.
Teams spend thousands of dollars in R&D to move literally a few pounds of weight in the chassis around to improve mass centralization. You don't think they'll spend money to work stack-up tolerancing to find a performance edge? These teams literally run CFD and/or windtunnel tests to analyze the effect of layering vinyl wrap over the a-posts. You're vastly underestimating the extent the teams will go to find performance. And now that the box has been tightened in which they can work, the more finite these details will become, but like always they will never stop working to optimize the cars.In my uneducated opinion, the teams will quickly find there isn't enough difference in the parts to affect the racing to the point where it's worth the expense of stacking them up.
This whole ****** forum is semantics.Semantics. The words that come before" Manipulation" in his sentence having meaning also
Man, let it lie, they don't understand that I could and the engineers and techs don't dimension anything that leads to stacking tolerances. That is the first rule you learn in making repeatable parts. Besides if any of them would look at a few illustrations they could see the the car has all kinds of allowable adjustments front and rear BUT they can't go out of the tolerance that is written in the specs.Semantics. The words that come before" Manipulation" in his sentence having meaning also
Then wipe it up with some tissues and flush it.This whole ****** forum is semantics.
Pushrods.Man, let it lie, they don't understand that I could and the engineers and techs don't dimension anything that leads to stacking tolerances. That is the first rule you learn in making repeatable parts. Besides if any of them would look at a few illustrations they could see the the car has all kinds of allowable adjustments front and rear BUT they can't go out of the tolerance that is written in the specs.
So you can imagine the impact of building a brand new Camaro last year? After year of marginalizing that advantage, and you post this?Teams spend thousands of dollars in R&D to move literally a few pounds of weight in the chassis around to improve mass centralization. You don't think they'll spend money to work stack-up tolerancing to find a performance edge? These teams literally run CFD and/or windtunnel tests to analyze the effect of layering vinyl wrap over the a-posts. You're vastly underestimating the extent the teams will go to find performance. And now that the box has been tightened in which they can work, the more finite these details will become, but like always they will never stop working to optimize the cars.
I'm not marginalizing it, I'm saying it's what the sanctioning body saw fit and also each manufacturer shares their baseline aero data with the others, so it's not like it was some surprise to Toyota. NASCAR has played give and take with the manufacturers for literally decades, so bark up another tree if all the sudden that came to you as some type of breaking news in the past couple of seasons.So you can imagine the impact of building a brand new Camaro last year? After year of marginalizing that advantage, and you post this?
Did you ever talk about the Camaro II as an "advantage," or just "leveling the playing field?" Chevy couldn't help but be better with what they had screwed up....but then the COVID/devlopment freeze was bull****. I get that NASCAR was in a pickle nobody could have seen coming, but what bothers me is the narrative. Even Jim Campbell recognized it, and I was honestly impressed that he did so. Class act for a guy who wouldn't touch Larson until he was winning.I'm not marginalizing it, I'm saying it's what the sanctioning body saw fit and also each manufacturer shares their baseline aero data with the others, so it's not like it was some surprise to Toyota. NASCAR has played give and take with the manufacturers for literally decades, so bark up another tree if all the sudden that came to you as some type of breaking news in the past couple of seasons.