I thought the same thing, keeping the front stretch and pit road those look unscathedNo sign of a short track except for the preservation of the part of the old track that is supposed to be part of the short track.
I’ve been to some awesome races at that place. It was a very unique track.NASCAR has sold 85% of the property, and they have no real comments about the future of the track, other than stating there's no timeline for anything. Reading between the lines, I would say they are shopping the last 90 acres they still own and hoping to sell for a premium. I sincerely doubt they rebuild another track here.
I love that place. It hurts. Really does.I’ve been to some awesome races at that place. It was a very unique track.
I’ve been to some awesome races at that place. It was a very unique track.
NASGREEDI love that place. It hurts. Really does.
NASGREED
I'd agree with this. Unfortunately.NASCAR has sold 85% of the property, and they have no real comments about the future of the track, other than stating there's no timeline for anything. Reading between the lines, I would say they are shopping the last 90 acres they still own and hoping to sell for a premium. I sincerely doubt they rebuild another track here.
18 degrees of banking at Michigan....14 for Fontana. I hate that she's gone.Wasn’t it almost literally a clone of Michigan?
Wasn't that the **** man? Fontana was my first track. I was so excited to be at a NASCAR event, I was in tears. I turned on the scanner for first practice....and as I was trying to tune into MY Toyota drivers, I landed on Dale Jr.'s scan.....he was headed into Three on his first hot lap, and his brakes weren't right. He said, "Two hundred mile an hour corner entry wit no brakes is booo sheeeet." Just awesome.I saw 221 going into T1.
Saw Kurt going 217 into 3 on the bottom.
75 feet wide, many grooves. So many great races there.
Texas is built on the majestic Fort Worth skyline.Indianapolis. Charlotte is within a mile of multiple apartment complexes.
They keep crap tracks like Talldega and Daytona that provide junk pack racing and 20-car pileups and then they build warehouses on Auto Club Speedway.
When they're done this track, do we know if it's coming to the cup series for sure or not?
99.999% certain. NASCAR would've just sold everything and turned it into warehouses of they weren't going to host a Cup race.
It’s too bad we’re getting more short tracks when the next gen car sucks on them.Wow, that warehouse where turn one used to be…is right there. I don’t know looks tight getting fans in and out, still looks like though the blueprints that were released. I hope this happens, a cup short track on the west coast would be fantastic.
They destroyed a great racetrack.
It was only great when the pavement wore out. For the first decade and more, it was generally duller than Michigan.They destroyed a great racetrack.
I’m aware.It was only great when the pavement wore out. For the first decade and more, it was generally duller than Michigan.
Is the Front stretch going to continue to be banked when the short track conversion takes place?
Wait, I missed that on the plans. I figured they'd be reusing pit road sorta but also figured they'd just build backwards to at least give themselves a chance of making it work and that of course they had tested it. Am I imagining here that they were shooting to have the current pit lane not change and just be on the outside of the conceived turns? Like THAT tight?The original plan was a track with an essentially flat backstretch and ridiculously high banked, and obscenely tight radius corners. Tighter than a good number of true, backwoods, Saturday night short tracks. The purpose of this is to save both the frontstretch infrastructure and the current pit road infrastructure. You see, old Fontana has suites running all the way behind the old configuration's pit wall. NASCAR... for God knows what reason... really wants to keep these suites and squeeze an unrealistic track in between.
Then word got out that the simulations done in North Carolina of the proposed track weren't feasible. Which you'd think they would've tried before drawing up an entire master plan, start the permitting process, and announced the changes to the fans
Annnnnnnddddd now we're here and no one's heard anything since that. NASCAR literally took SMI's "mini mile" concept to the EXTREMEME, and said "f it, bet that'll work!" and within 20 minutes of that idea being hatched, the real estate listing for most of the track's property was already out.