StandOnIt
Farm Truck
they do a crappy job of it.A great point made on NASCAR Radio yesterday (I know, right?).....How the hell can F1 tech their cars so quickly when they are 10X more technical than NASCAR race cars? How can that be?
they do a crappy job of it.A great point made on NASCAR Radio yesterday (I know, right?).....How the hell can F1 tech their cars so quickly when they are 10X more technical than NASCAR race cars? How can that be?
they do a crappy job of it.
Oh thank heavens, I'm so relieved.
He'll rush in from an outside parking lot ... exhausted from a day of texting his team from inside his rental car.
Performance advantage is irrelevant. Not only was the part mounted outside the defined specs, it was an illegal part to begin with. Rules violations should be called whether there's a benefit or not.He should be allowed. There was no performance advantage. He got screwed. Poor guy.
Nah, make 'em watch it from the NBC booth with the gerbils.There's something NASCAR probably needs to fix too. Suspended crew chiefs and car chiefs should not be able to communicate with the ANYONE during the race. Perhaps they should have to go to the R&D center and watch the race in a room under the supervision of a NASCAR official.
Good plan, he won't be able to be understood with all of the screaming going on. He probably would be as confused as the rest of us.Nah, make 'em watch it from the NBC booth with the gerbils.
The most Important stuff is done at the shop, keeping those guys away wont effect anything. Those teams have tons of experience they can go to to call a race.There's something NASCAR probably needs to fix too. Suspended crew chiefs and car chiefs should not be able to communicate with the ANYONE during the race. Perhaps they should have to go to the R&D center and watch the race in a room under the supervision of a NASCAR official.
Nah, make 'em watch it from the NBC booth with the gerbils.
The most Important stuff is done at the shop, keeping those guys away wont effect anything. Those teams have tons of experience they can go to to call a race.
Sure he can make the calls from home but he isnt gonna come up with anything different then Tony Gibson will.I agree about the stuff done at the shop, but I don't think it's right that with modern technology, a crew chief can basically call a race from home or wherever almost as if he was on top of the pit box. That kind of makes the suspension pointless, doesn't it?
I'm talking for a couple of races its not gonna matter.Then why send the crew chief to the track at all? Let them stay home and work on cars, not that most of them ever touch a car anyway. What happened to all of that relationship between driver and crew chief that is supposed to be so important? Now it doesn't matter? I think that a good crew chief in sync with the feedback they are getting from the driver and can make great calls on the fly like Paul Wolf certainly makes a difference. I think the world of Tony Gibson, but I don't think anybody would trade Childers for him.
Nah, make 'em watch it from the NBC booth with the gerbils.
Teams don't make spoilers. The spoiler was mounted WRONG according to specs.Performance advantage is irrelevant. Not only was the part mounted outside the defined specs, it was an illegal part to begin with. Rules violations should be called whether there's a benefit or not.
Teams don't make spoilers. The spoiler was mounted WRONG according to specs.
The officials haven't been trained to know if it off center although they can spot stuff on pit road just before a race.
NASCAR SVP Scott Miller says the Kevin Harvick was spoiler's height was OK but the spoiler was moved to the right, which helped aerodynamic performance. He said it doesn't matter if the team altered a spoiler bought by the approved provider or made its own, but NASCAR believes it was a separate manufactured part by SHR.
The part was still meeting all specs except it's position on the deck. I applaud them for making their own parts. Never liked the idea that teams had to buy parts from Nascar.
Desperate times call for desperate measures.That sir, is cruel and unusual punishment
I don't care one way or the other whether they make or buy them, but the rules say that part must be purchased and who it must be purchased from. Childers wasn't 'screwed', as Revman said. He's responsible for his team having mounted a part they knew was illegal when they made it. I don't have much problem with teams pushing the rules, but I have no sympathy for them when they're caught flat-out breaking them.The part was still meeting all specs except it's position on the deck. I applaud them for making their own parts. Never liked the idea that teams had to buy parts from Nascar.
The punishment you called for would be worse than being pecked to pieces by a flock of sparrowsDesperate times call for desperate measures.
They didn't reposition it on the deck for good looksThe part was still meeting all specs except it's position on the deck. I applaud them for making their own parts. Never liked the idea that teams had to buy parts from Nascar.
The race-winning Phoenix car of Kyle Busch, second-place car of Brad Keselowski and the cars of playoff drivers Kevin Harvick and Chase Elliott have passed technical inspection at NASCAR's research center in North Carolina. There were no points penalties to Cup teams from the Phoenix weekend.
http://www.espn.com/espn/now?nowId=21-41044018-4
The part was still meeting all specs except it's position on the deck. I applaud them for making their own parts. Never liked the idea that teams had to buy parts from Nascar.
And next you will be saying Nascar didn't benefit in any way from these forced sales.They don't buy them from NASCAR, they buy them from an approved supplier, whether it be the car manufacturer, or an outside supplier, like Roush for the roof flaps, all of the CoT rear wings came from Crawford Composites, etc.
Well, where's the fun in that?The race-winning Phoenix car of Kyle Busch, second-place car of Brad Keselowski and the cars of playoff drivers Kevin Harvick and Chase Elliott have passed technical inspection at NASCAR's research center in North Carolina. There were no points penalties to Cup teams from the Phoenix weekend.
http://www.espn.com/espn/now?nowId=21-41044018-4
More than likely. How is that relevant to whether Childers deserves to be suspended for violating the rules?And next you will be saying Nascar didn't benefit in any way from these forced sales.
It doesn't and the suspension means nothing. I would think the top CC in the garage has team members quite capable of stepping in. Remember Chad getting a suspension and JJ wins the race with ? who then went on to CC for Tony? He also get fired for winning Tony a championship and not stroking Tony's ego.More than likely. How is that relevant to whether Childers deserves to be suspended for violating the rules?
Wouldn't that violate the Geneva Convention or something?Nah, make 'em watch it from the NBC booth with the gerbils.
I agree this particular suspension doesn't have much effect, esp. with access to modern communications tools. But I started down this path in response to Revman's 'got screwed' post. I'll leave this one alone for awhile.It doesn't and the suspension means nothing. I would think the top CC in the garage has team members quite capable of stepping in. Remember Chad getting a suspension and JJ wins the race with ? who then went on to CC for Tony? He also get fired for winning Tony a championship and not stroking Tony's ego.
And next you will be saying Nascar didn't benefit in any way from these forced sales.
Performance advantage is irrelevant. Not only was the part mounted outside the defined specs, it was an illegal part to begin with. Rules violations should be called whether there's a benefit or not.
Well, where's the fun in that?
The harvick team cheating just proves to me that he is afraid of losing to kyle busch. He knows he can't beat the 18 team straight up so they stoop to cheating to get ahead. Its pathetic if you ask me