Superstore
AUCTIONS
Getty Images
The Nationwide Series' new-look Toyota Camry was part of the test at Talladega.

New race car receives favorable marks at test

By Sporting News Wire Service
November 3, 2009
08:51 AM EST
Save Article Email Article Print Article RSS
type size: + -

TALLADEGA, Ala. -- In a perfect world, the performance of the new Nationwide Series race cars will match their aesthetics.

Based on the first superspeedway shakedown Monday at Talladega, that just might be the case.

NASCAR unveiled the new Chevrolet Impala, Ford Mustang, Dodge Challenger and Toyota Camry on Saturday at the 2.66-mile racetrack. The cars drew strong reviews for their racy looks and distinctive lines.

"This has been an exciting few days for the series," said Joe Balash, the director of the Nationwide Series. "Dodge unveiled the Challenger last week, we had all four cars together for the first time on Saturday ... it was pretty special. "We believe this car will give our series its own unique identity and that certainly was one of our goals from the very beginning in developing this new car."

On Monday, eight cars took to the asphalt, first in single-car runs and later drafting together in groups.

Four Chevrolet teams and drivers participated: Richard Childress Racing (Jeff Burton), Kevin Harvick Inc. (Kevin Harvick), JR Motorsports (Kelly Bires) and Phoenix Racing (James Buescher). The test roster also included two Roush Fenway Racing Fords (Colin Braun and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.), a Penske Racing Dodge (Justin Allgaier) and a Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota (Trevor Bayne).

"It drives like a dream," Allgaier said after his first laps in the car. He was one of eight drivers representing the four series manufacturers who put the new cars through the paces for the first time on a track more than 1.5 miles in length. Previous tests for the Nationwide Series new car were at Richmond and Charlotte last year.

"Initially, [we got] very favorable comments," said Brett Bodine, NASCAR's director of cost research. "Kevin Harvick and Jeff Burton were the first to go out in a little bit of a draft session, and one of the things that stuck in my mind was a comment that these cars race better in the draft than the current Nationwide car."

NASCAR started the session with a restrictor plate (designed to reduced airflow to the carburetor and thereby to reduce horsepower at superspeedways) whose holes measured 29/32nd of an inch. Throughout the early portions of the test, NASCAR experimented with different hole sizes, moving to one inch and then back to 31/32nds, as teams also tested different spring and suspension combinations.

"We wanted to start conservative, because this was the first time we've had these cars on a superspeedway," Balash said. "So we put a tapered spacer on the car, and then we put a restrictor plate under the tapered spacer. ... We made a gear change along the way to work on the RPMs of the car. We're trying to balance our speeds and our RPMs.

"We want this engine package to be the same RPM ranges we race everywhere else."

NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton was pleased with the early results.

"We've got a target to start shaking the cars down at 190 miles an hour and get our gears and restrictor plates as close as we can," he said. "None of that will be finalized, as far as that part of it goes, when we leave here. But it's to get enough speed in the cars, let the guys work on the chassis setups and, for a few of them, to do a little drafting out there and see how the cars react to the draft.

"We're in hopes that it should be different enough from the Cup car that it'll take a little bit different strategy when they get on the race track."

Following its debut next summer at Daytona, the Nationwide Series new car also will compete in points races at Michigan in August, at Richmond in September and at Charlotte in October. Full integration for the new car into the series is targeted for 2011.

The End

Share Article Save Article Email Article Print Article RSS
  • MySpace
  • Facebook
  • Digg
 

Also

POPULAR ALERTS
or Create Your Own
Photo Gallery

Truck finale at Homestead

ViewArchive

Remember To Check Out

All External sites will open in a new browser window. NASCAR.COM does not endorse external sites.
© 2001-2009 NASCAR | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Turner Entertainment Digital Network NASCAR.COM is part of the Turner Sports and Entertainment Digital Network.