Stewarts Car Confiscated by nascar

ORT WORTH, Texas -- In an unprecedented move Friday, NASCAR officials disallowed defending Winston Cup champion Tony Stewart's primary car from competing in Sunday's Samsung/RadioShack 500 at Texas Motor Speedway.
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Tony Stewart Credit: Autostock

The car, which had not yet been used by the team, was confiscated by NASCAR and its backup, another unused chassis according to Joe Gibbs Racing team manager Jimmy Makar, was pulled out of the transporter in its place.

"I'm not sure we ever have done this," NASCAR president Mike Helton said.

NASCAR impounded the car and planned to return it to its technical and research and development facility in Concord, N.C., to investigate it further.

The team was not allowed to take anything from the confiscated car. A team spokesman said the team used a back-up engine from its hauler for the car.

Stewart's back-up car did not clear inspection until more than halfway through the two-hour pre-qualifying practice. Stewart ran 10 laps and was 32nd on the time sheet. Jerry Nadeau, who turned only eight laps, was fastest.
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"The uniqueness of this action comes from a great deal of action by NASCAR, the race teams and moving to the common body locations and the new templates, to eliminate the exoticness of the cars," NASCAR president Mike Helton said. "This is the first case of a car being outside the box that was built for them.

"The effort by John (Darby, Winston Cup director), the teams and the body shops has been a success -- on the racetrack, in the garage area and from the car owners concerning the economics of the sport, so we have a high level of interest in keeping it in that direction."

Makar said the original No. 20 Monte Carlo failed the "X measurement" test, which is one method of determining the placement of the car's decklid in relation to the centerline of the chassis.

"It's a measurement from the corners of the decklid up to the corners of the roof, across the back glass," Makar said. "In the X they look for offsets to the car and the measurement was bigger than what they told us they were going to allow."

Makar said the discrepancy, which he cited as a half-inch, could not easily be corrected at the racetrack, so the back-up car was taken off the hauler.

"Why it was bigger, we're not really sure yet," Makar said. "We build every car the same, but that car, for whatever reason, showed a little bit bigger. We'll determine that when we get it home."

Makar hinted that the offset might be done to affect a car's downforce package.

"It's not so much a case of body mounting points as it looks at offsets at different points of the car, from the roof to the decklid," Makar said of the X test. "What it's designed for is to keep you from offsetting the decklid way over to the right."

Helton said a determination of any advantage the car might have had would be determined at the R&D center.

"We have taken it to keep it in that condition and to investigate further rather than have them (team) cut it up," Helton said. "The resources of the R&D center give us the ability to understand things. We'll take it back to the R&D center and determine more about this situation."

Helton said Bobby Labonte's No. 18 Interstate Batteries Chevrolet, the other Joe Gibbs Racing Winston Cup car, did not have any issues in inspection that he was aware of. Labonte practiced for 15 laps and was seventh on the speed chart.

Helton also said he was not sure what type of advantage the team might have been seeking, if any.

"This is the first we have seen this year this exotic," Helton said. "So that is why we reacted. We do not know (what the team was seeking). That is what we want to find out, if that (performance advantage) was the motive."
 
Sorry for some of the weird words in it since I copy and Pasted off nascar.com and got the links and the photo credit
 
Originally posted by pettyfan4life@Mar 28 2003, 04:04 PM
hahaha He got caught
Last I knew, Tony didn't build the car. But yes, someone has some explaining to do. Oh Joe....
 
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