Charlie Spencer
Road courses and short tracks.
I'll probably never see it, but that won't stop me from agreeing with you completely.My comment on this idea is in the Podium Nascar thread.
I'll probably never see it, but that won't stop me from agreeing with you completely.My comment on this idea is in the Podium Nascar thread.
You'd have to admit though that back when Evel Knievel jumped the Snake River Canyon, that had to be a close 2nd to this.
I'm trying to understand the excuseapalooza for running restrictor plates rather than trying the infield road course.
If they keep the current aero I don't see how they're going to get drafting and slingshots. These cars don't seem to generate much drag anywhere now. Unless they do something in conjunction with the plates they'll just look abnormally slow and easy to drive.
I don't get this level of extreme hate. Nobody has any idea how this will work, stop the bitching until we see the results. Or is this just yet another case of people seeing "Restrictor plates?!?!? Hurrr durrr not real racing Daytona sux omg go to IRP". Just like when we get a legit caution in a race from someone pounding the wall and the race thread blows up with "OMG illegitimate debris BS brian france sucks for interrupting my 180 lap green flag nap 4 second leads are real racing". Restrictor plates, caution, I think those are three words that just trigger delusional levels of hate within a small section of fans. I wonder what else will trigger them? Guess what, IRP isn't happening, and plate racing is popular, get over it.
I wish MIS had restrictor plates honestly. But you also have tons of space there and the ability with a draft to run multiple grooves.
Indy has one groove on the corners. Essentially you'll have a ton of maneuvering down the long straights, and then a wrestling match on each turn to get to that bottom
Also one thing we have to realize is that we're racing purists on here, but the majority of non diehards absolutely love plate racing hence the excitement around Talledega and Daytona races
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Also one thing we have to realize is that we're racing purists on here, but the majority of non diehards absolutely love plate racing hence the excitement around Talledega and Daytona races.
I don't get this level of extreme hate. Nobody has any idea how this will work, stop the bitching until we see the results. Or is this just yet another case of people seeing "Restrictor plates?!?!? Hurrr durrr not real racing Daytona sux omg go to IRP". Just like when we get a legit caution in a race from someone pounding the wall and the race thread blows up with "OMG illegitimate debris BS brian france sucks for interrupting my 180 lap green flag nap 4 second leads are real racing". Restrictor plates, caution, I think those are three words that just trigger delusional levels of hate within a small section of fans. I wonder what else will trigger them? Guess what, IRP isn't happening, and plate racing is popular, get over it.
I still say we go with my idea of creating some sort of temporary banking with like 45 degrees ominous each turn
I have no idea what my phone autocorrected to ominous, but I feel like some sort of sheeting could be created you roll it out and bolt it on.I like this. There has to be a way
45 degree banking in the turns would be pretty OMINOUS!I have no idea what my phone autocorrected to ominous, but I feel like some sort of sheeting could be created you roll it out and bolt it on.
That's why it's really high bankedThe corners are too tight for substantial banking.
As a bad as a prostitute, that just professes to give a damn about real racing while cashing the checks.
Or idiots that dont know it's ass from a hole in the ground.
Probably a little of both.
Greg, Greg, Greg, Greg……………………… Dude……
Ya ain’t never gonna get ta be a rich, famous ‘nselfimportant motorsports entertainment journalist with that kinda attitude.
75% is probably being generous.The racing at Indy can't get any worse so why not try something new I guess. Indy just isn't fit for stock cars. It's an open wheel track and always will be. Nascar can pretend it's a prestigious race all they want but it's not in the Nascar world. If it were the stands wouldn't be 75% empty.
I'm sorry, you're wrong. I actively hate plate racing.
I'm with you for most of the rest, except maybe the part about matching the cars to the track. The tracks should be matched to the cars, not the other way around. If the cars don't suit the track, especially in terms of racing without endangering the fans, then the track shouldn't be on the schedule, regardless of how historic.
Ive learned that this theory is not applicable with nascarcan't get any worse
I wish I could like this 1000 times.The few of you giving this the benefit of the doubt, perhaps you'll trust a Cup Champions opinion. Taking away horsepower would make passing even harder.
I'll take the chance of a first-lap incident over a restrictor plate snoozer. They should be able to withstand contact down there more anyways.Because 40 stock cars trying to make a 90 degree turn with 0 banking at the end of a .6 mile straightaway is a terrible idea. The Indycar guys can't get through there clean and that's with 25 cars.
I don't know. I don't remember the coffee table strapped to the back of the car in 2015 creating much of that.Me thinks they could draft on the front/backstretches. But they'll still be going sing-file through the turns.
I don't even think the tapered spacer is a good idea.The few of you giving this the benefit of the doubt, perhaps you'll trust a Cup Champions opinion. Taking away horsepower would make passing even harder.
Physics is the law. It ALWAYS wins.One other thing ,RP racing at Indianapolis will be inheritly more dangerous.
First the fans: An RP pack of cars at Indianapolis will be heading into corners, all 4 of them bookending those 5/8th mile short chutes. They will be far more tighter and treacherous than the apexes on the front straights at Talladega and Daytona.
In spite of those apexes being softer and more like a 45 degree turn, verses an Indianapolis 90°, several cars have been hooked and yawed into flight.
That problem will intensify exponentially at Indianapolis.
-Each corner is more dangerous, with four a lap verses one at the other RPs.
Barring cautions, the racing hook and yaw opportunities at Talladega are 188 per race, 200 at Daytona, and 640 per race at Indianapolis.
And again those corners will be much tighter and subjected to demands of momentum racing. The Accordion effect will be far more unforgiving.
I sincerely hope they will at least restrict and close off those bookending bleachers and remove the soft landing zones. They cant fill them up anyway, just keep all fans near the flag. To do otherwise would be criminal negligence.
And the drivers will definitely be more at risk verses those catch fence cables. Just take a look at the Austin Dillion flip at Daytona a few years ago.
When one of those cars gets inverted enough to hit at the wrong angle, no COT technology, HANS, ot Lajoie seat will save a driver verses the shredding.
It will be some horrendous decapitation, mandated by idiots.
Next time Nascar brags about caring about safety and the innovations, I hope folks remember the foolishness of this choice. There are so many available tracks for better racing, and most definitely safer.
I like the real native danger of speed, not this type of crap.
I vote to kill the Indianapolis race off the schedule after the 25th running in 2018. Replace it with a short track or a road course...a REAL road course.
You'd have to admit though that back when Evel Knievel jumped the Snake River Canyon, that had to be a close 2nd to this.
Not sure about that.It won't produce pack racing of the side-by-side variety because there is only one groove. It will produce a freight-train single file for 160 laps. Perhaps this is what Chex meant.
You people still believe anyone looks at submitted surveys? Nothing more than a facade.Welp, looks like I have something to tell them in the "is there anything else you would like to share with us" in the FC Survey for this week.