racingfan7
Start and Park
Not many Junior Johnson fans I see
Thats a twerk lolTape on the front fascia?
I'm not either. When the mostly-spec character of the Next Gen car first became known, I posted here about my opposition. I relish the small, mostly invisible differences that make a Penske Ford race better (sometimes) than an SHR Ford, or a Hendrick Chevy vs. a Childress or vs. a Gibbs TRD Toyota.Not a fan of total spec racing....
How about this... the manufacturers are satisfied to build the best racecar they can within the rules, and to associate with skilled teams to set it up within the degrees of freedom they all have, and to strive for flawless execution each week, and then leave it to their highly-skilled badass race car drivers to bring home the trophy.NASCAR struggles to find a balance between spec racing and some innovation on behalf of the manufacturers. Without some freedom, why the hell would the manufacturers even be there?
Once again, you are describing a culture of serial cheating... where the recipe for success is for the richest teams to spend endless sums of money to stay ahead of the Nascar inspectors, and when they get caught, pay the penalty, handle the PR, take the medicine this week, and then cheat somewhere else next week. Never ending game of cat and mouse, as you said.I do think that the Next Gen concept is solid. The ONLY way it works is if NASCAR busts everything, but is that even reasonable? Can they find EVERYTHING? If they can't, NASCAR is what it always was, and those that have will win, and those who don't will get their asses handed to them eventually. It will be a never ending game of cat and mouse....
I remember Bobby Allison saying the trouble with NASCAR tech is you have $200,000 a year crew chiefs( this was in the 80's) matching wits with $30,000 a year inspectors. NASCAR heard him loud and clear and eventually hired his former crew chief to head up the inspection process, Mr Gary Nelson. I remember Waddell Wilson's comment when the news broke that Gary was gonna be the head of Tech inspection, he said " if you wanna catch a crook, you hire a crook". NASCAR now employs some of the best in the business at catching things that just a few years ago the teams could slip by. They still get things to slip through but they WILL get caught and with the strict limitations of this car I dont see a few teams winning the majority of the races anytime soonI'm not either. When the mostly-spec character of the Next Gen car first became known, I posted here about my opposition. I relish the small, mostly invisible differences that make a Penske Ford race better (sometimes) than an SHR Ford, or a Hendrick Chevy vs. a Childress or vs. a Gibbs TRD Toyota.
Incredible as it seems, Nascar ignored my protests, listening instead to Roger and Rick and Chip and Andy, etc.
And then an amazing thing happened... Justin Marks established Trackhouse; Matt Kaulig expanded into Cup; GMS expanded into Cup; Michael Freakin' Jordan plus Hambone established 23XI... and they have all been competitive, all race winners except GMS so far... and Dale Jr. is on the sidelines with sweaty palms just itching for the right time to jump in too. The new business model is fueling all this.
So I'm willing to accept that the revolutionary Next Gen business model is good for the sport... but only if the teams allow it to work. If the culture is to be, the richest teams employ the most engineers to cheat in ever-more creative ways that can't be detected... if that culture wins out, then we'll soon be back to two or maybe three competitive teams. And they will be spending more than ever.
I hear you on this, but I think that sometimes the conversation boils down to this....Is the car and all of its associated engineering part of this equation? Think F1. You build a better car, and it doesn't matter how great your driver is (kind of). Or, do we level the playing field, and let the drivers and teams duke it out. If #2 is the preference, then the question for the OEMs becomes....Is there a better place for us to be? Look at SRX.....Many love it, but I have no interest because I don't even know what the hell the cars are. The thing that separates our athletes from other sports are the chariots they drive, and those pieces need to be interesting. Spec everything takes the car out of the equation.How about this... the manufacturers are satisfied to build the best racecar they can within the rules, and to associate with skilled teams to set it up within the degrees of freedom they all have, and to strive for flawless execution each week, and then leave it to their highly-skilled badass race car drivers to bring home the trophy.
I fully understand that no one is willing to be the only one who isn't cheating. But if no one is cheating, what's wrong with that competitive scenario I outlined above?
Once again, you are describing a culture of serial cheating... where the recipe for success is for the richest teams to spend endless sums of money to stay ahead of the Nascar inspectors, and when they get caught, pay the penalty, handle the PR, take the medicine this week, and then cheat somewhere else next week. Never ending game of cat and mouse, as you said.
That's old Nascar. New Nascar needs to be different... and Trackhouse and Kaulig and 23XI and GMS and RFK (and others) are betting that it *can* be different. If they didn't think so, they wouldn't be making those huge investments just to be the next Front Row Motorsports or JTG-Daugherty.
A vague explanation finally
We all knew it was an L1 and an L2, knew tape was used on the yotas, but on McDowell's car we were led to believe that bondo(filler) was used. Not a word about the wheel tub being modified.Pretty much what i said earlier, the difference was an L-1 vs an L-2
No, not in the early stage when it first happened nobody knew but I had heard it was. I had that discussion with LewWe all knew it was an L1 and an L2, knew tape was used on the yotas, but on McDowell's car we were led to believe that bondo(filler) was used. Not a word about the wheel tub being modified.
Instead of going on one of you age old indignant yota rants, you should fact check what you are having a problem with
See @StandOnIt....This is a statement of fact.The screen you keep referring to is an option per the rules that has been available to all teams since day one of the next-gen cars. Teams early in the year were experimenting with it and found out the hard way that it was creating cooling issues. It's explained in the following article:
https://m.nascar.com/news-media/202...ong-data-on-repairs-adjustments-before-vegas/
The way that teams can control how much air passes through the radiator now is with a blocker plate that can be installed behind the radiator to throttle some of that airflow. If a team chooses to use a radiator blocker plate then it must use a piece that is 0.062 inches thick with identical circular holes to allow the air to pass through. Teams can tune how much air passes by the size of these holes if the blocker plate is installed.
This....Such bull****. They don't want to be saved from themselves. They want to win everything. That is how they got to where they are. Nobody wants to be saved. Everybody wants to win.The owners said " save us from ourselves". They and the manufacturers along with NASCAR created the car that would do it but evidently the word didnt trickle down to the Engineers and Crew Chiefs. The owners really meant rules for thee but not for me with a wink and a nod. If they truly wanted it they would start canning anyone who purposely disobeyed the rules, they are complicit.
Believe it or not it's possible to want to win without breaking the bank.This....Such bull****. They don't want to be saved from themselves. They want to win everything. That is how they got to where they are. Nobody wants to be saved. Everybody wants to win.
Believe it or not it's possible to want to win without breaking the bank.
Also with reduced costs the series is more attractive to sponsors.Damn right. In 2016, Gene Haas gave several interviews where he discussed budget numbers candidly. I've lost the links due to a computer crash, but he said a championship-caliber cup team cost about $15 million annually per car EXCLUDING the cost of the driver.
2016 was Old Nascar. Most top-tier teams were racing 15-20+ different chassis per car number. The four SHR entries were supported by 400+ employees, including 180 (!) who traveled to each race. Mostly three-day shows. Engines lasted one race.
Next Gen Nascar: The fleet is capped at seven chassis max, mostly assembled from spec parts, not in-house designed and fabricated parts. Same chassis used at every type of track, from super speedway to road course to short track. The engine bill has been cut by half. Two-day shows. Nascar limits on traveling headcount. Total headcount has gotta be a lot lower. I don't have any data, but what would all the people do all day?
What used to cost $15 million per car excluding cost of the driver... maybe $8-10 million now (after some start-up costs)?? I'm guessing, have no reliable data, but it's gotta be a sizable reduction. Not all is due to the Next Gen spec parts, but most of it is. This is what's fueling the new owners establishing new cup teams. It's good for the sport, and it's just gotta work.
Maybe your reading comprehension was off when you wrote this about my postThis....Such bull****. They don't want to be saved from themselves. They want to win everything. That is how they got to where they are. Nobody wants to be saved. Everybody wants to win.
I think you are taking my comments the wrong way. I am agreeing with you.....Hence, the "This....."Maybe your reading comprehension was off when you wrote this about my post
Then maybe i should turn my ownI think you are taking my comments the wrong way. I am agreeing with you.....Hence, the "This....."
Naw....I can see how you saw it.Then maybe i should turn my own
Damn right. In 2016, Gene Haas gave several interviews where he discussed budget numbers candidly. I've lost the links due to a computer crash, but he said a championship-caliber cup team cost about $15 million annually per car EXCLUDING the cost of the driver.
2016 was Old Nascar. Most top-tier teams were racing 15-20+ different chassis per car number. The four SHR entries were supported by 400+ employees, including 180 (!) who traveled to each race. Mostly three-day shows. Engines lasted one race.
Next Gen Nascar: The fleet is capped at seven chassis max, mostly assembled from spec parts, not in-house designed and fabricated parts. Same chassis used at every type of track, from super speedway to road course to short track. The engine bill has been cut by half. Two-day shows. Nascar limits on traveling headcount. Total headcount has gotta be a lot lower. I don't have any data, but what would all the people do all day?
What used to cost $15 million per car excluding cost of the driver... maybe $8-10 million now (after some start-up costs)?? I'm guessing, have no reliable data, but it's gotta be a sizable reduction. Not all is due to the Next Gen spec parts, but most of it is. This is what's fueling the new owners establishing new cup teams. It's good for the sport, and it's just gotta work.
I agree with this.Damn right. In 2016, Gene Haas gave several interviews where he discussed budget numbers candidly. I've lost the links due to a computer crash, but he said a championship-caliber cup team cost about $15 million annually per car EXCLUDING the cost of the driver.
2016 was Old Nascar. Most top-tier teams were racing 15-20+ different chassis per car number. The four SHR entries were supported by 400+ employees, including 180 (!) who traveled to each race. Mostly three-day shows. Engines lasted one race.
Next Gen Nascar: The fleet is capped at seven chassis max, mostly assembled from spec parts, not in-house designed and fabricated parts. Same chassis used at every type of track, from super speedway to road course to short track. The engine bill has been cut by half. Two-day shows. Nascar limits on traveling headcount. Total headcount has gotta be a lot lower. I don't have any data, but what would all the people do all day?
What used to cost $15 million per car excluding cost of the driver... maybe $8-10 million now (after some start-up costs)?? I'm guessing, have no reliable data, but it's gotta be a sizable reduction. Not all is due to the Next Gen spec parts, but most of it is. This is what's fueling the new owners establishing new cup teams. It's good for the sport, and it's just gotta work.
That isn't entirely true. IROC racing cars were built by the same people in the same shop and used the same body, engine and drivetrain and setup.
The Next Gen uses a different engine and body, has numerous suspension changes for adjustments for balance using caster, camber, toe in or out and that is apparent watching cars get faster and slower as the race wears on and the track changes.