NASCAR's new inspection process

dpkimmel2001

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Kinda surprised I'm not seeing any dislike for NASCAR's new inspection process that was announced the other day.

Both prerace and prequalifying, if you fail an inspection station, will have to go through all inspection stations again.

I wonder if we'll see the backups in the inspection process like we did a while back? Who knows, maybe they'll get it right the first time?
 
Kinda makes sence, could changing something that fails alter a setting somewhere else? Or could a team change something that was already inspected and passed to gain a advantage.
 
I wonder if we'll see the backups in the inspection process like we did a while back? Who knows, maybe they'll get it right the first time?

This was before my time, how did this work? Did teams prep two cars?
 
I suspect it is a penalty for those teams that might be testing NASCAR to see what they can get away with. Teams should know what it takes to pass inspection by now.
New aero rules will present a big problem like the beginning of last season. Remember how bad it was. Some even missed qualifying runs.
 
Great change. Stops some of the attempts to cheat. We know Chad would put his car through with an obvious failure. make changes to other parts of the car and fix the problem which allowed him to start a cheated up car. :rolleyes:
 
How about just issuing a penalty? Taking away wins would work.
 
NASCAR makes sweeping changes to inspection and rules enforcement

With the start of the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season just one day away, the sanctioning body is making sweeping changes to its inspection and deterrence model for rules enforcement in the Cup garage.

Thursday at 4 p.m. NASCAR announced a series of rules changes with regards to at-track inspections.

The bottom line is that starting immediately, NASCAR is going to attempt to handle penalties at the track when offenses occur, rather than waiting until the middle of the following week to deal with them.


“Where possible, infractions which occur during a race weekend will be contained to that race weekend,” NASCAR wrote in a memo. “Significant infractions will still be subject to post-event penalties.”

Race weekend penalties could include such items as “Radiator, exhaust headers, sway bars, shock absorbers, truck arms, hubs, pinion angle shims, fail inspection two or more times, bump stops,” said NASCAR’s memo.

“Severity, timing, and reoccurrence of infraction will determine the penalty,” which could include “Loss of hard card(s), loss of practice time, loss of pit selection, tail of field penalty, green flag pass through, green flag stop and go, lap(s) penalty.”

Safety penalties, such as loss of ballast or missing lug nuts will be handled on a case-by-case basis.

In addition, the old P1-P6 penalty system is gone.

Now there are just two penalty tiers. A Level 1 infraction — for things like having 17 or fewer lug nuts or failing to meet minimum weight — will carry a 10- to 40-point penalty, a one-to-three week suspension and a fine of $25,000 to $75,000.

A Level 2 penalty for things that traction control or illegal fuel additives or testing would up the ante to 75 points, a six-week suspension and fines of $100,000 to $200,000.

The at-track inspection procedure is changing, too.

From now on, there will be three inspections: A weekend-opening inspection that covers only fuel systems, engines and safety equipment, followed by pre-qualifying and pre-race inspections.

Per NASCAR, “Pre-qualifying and pre-race will consist of a full inspection – fuel systems, engines, safety components, chassis, templates, and weights and measurements.” And if a car flunks any of the inspection stations, it has to go back to the garage and repeat every single part of the inspection.


http://www.foxsports.com/nascar/sto...-inspection-daytona-500-monster-energy-021617
 
Finally some changes I can agree with.
 
Yeah, just what we need at this point - more changes with less than 36 hours before Shootout practice. By the time they drop the green for the 500, the only thing that won't have changed from last year will be racing in a counter-clockwise direction, and I'm not so sure that's written in stone any more either.

I don't have an opinion on the inspection changes yet. I'll see how they play out.
 
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