NASCAR Rule Changes for 2012

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  • Golden Taters
    RIP West
    • Jul 2009
    • 6640

    NASCAR Rule Changes for 2012

    NASCAR has issued a new technical bulletin to its Sprint Cup teams, detailing major changes to cooling systems for 2012 Speedweeks at Daytona International Speedway in an effort to better regulate tandem drafting.

    According to Chris Paulson, president and owner of C&R Racing Inc. -- which manufactures nearly all of the radiators used in NASCAR's premier series -- the sanctioning body will be significantly reducing the size of the radiators and changing the location of the grille openings before the cars return for Daytona testing in January.

    "[Sprint Cup Series director] John Darby is implementing a two-gallon maximum radiator size," Paulson said. "So in other words, the big, huge five-gallon radiators everybody's running will be down to two. And that accumulator can was a one-gallon max volume. It's going down to a half-gallon-sized can."

    The idea is to make the cooling systems less efficient, Paulson said, forcing the cars to run in open air to keep water temperatures down.

    "We'll probably see some result from that, but it's not going to be huge, mainly because they've got these things figured out now," Paulson said. "But it's still going to have an effect.

    "The bigger effect is going to be moving the grille opening up to the bumper fascia area. Because now when they're tucked up behind another car, they're really going to kill all the air. So I think they're on the right track with that. They'll get the result that way."

    In addition, NASCAR will require softer springs, a smaller rear spoiler and a baseline restrictor-plate size of 29/32ths of an inch, or 1/64th of an inch larger than the plate used for the 2011 Daytona 500.

    "We had some productive tests at Talladega and Daytona in October and November and this rules package is a result of the information we were able to gather from those tests," Darby said. "Our goal was to put together a good, solid baseline aerodynamic package for the Preseason Thunder test at Daytona and we believe we've made a lot of progress in doing that.

    "We want to be able to give the teams more options when it comes to drafting and we want to be able to reduce the difference in the speeds between the tandem style of racing and more of the pack style of racing that the fans are accustomed to seeing. We believe we're headed in the right direction with that."

    Pressurized cooling systems had been used for years in open-wheel racing but made their way to NASCAR only in the past 12 years, Paulson said. And it wasn't until just a few years ago that teams realized they could run water temperatures well past the boiling point for entire races without appreciable damage to their engines.

    That issue came to the forefront during last year's Budweiser Shootout, when drivers used tandem drafting throughout the entire race for the first time.

    "I got called into the trailer the Sunday morning after the Shootout and although [NASCAR officials] weren't mad at me, they knew this was an evolution in cooling," Paulson said. "They just wanted to try to do something to fix it.

    "NASCAR asked me personally if we could have manufactured 50 33-pound pressure relief valves by Wednesday -- before the Twins [Gatorade Duel qualifying races]. So we did just that. We built them at our shop at Indianapolis, shipped them to Daytona and put them together. And that's how the race was run."

    The pressure was reduced to 25 pounds at Talladega, but had only a limited effect on tandem drafting. Paulson believes the new rules -- combined with changes to the restrictor plates and spoilers -- should have the desired effect at Daytona. But it won't eliminate tandem drafting entirely.

    "It'll be a short number of laps, and they'll be peeking out a lot more," Paulson said. "They certainly won't be able to do a sustained lap-after-lap run. I think that'll be taken care of. But you'll see, for one or two laps, them hook up if they want to go and pass people.

    "I think that'll mix it up a lot more. And it needs to. I don't disagree with NASCAR of their wish to break that up. It's really changed that type of racing."



    I'm glad NASCAR is trying to break up the tandem racing and try to get back to the old pack racing, but this still won't fix the problem completely.

    It will also be interesting to see how electronic fuel injection compares over the old carburetor setup.

    Dale Jr thinks the new changes will be dangerous, ""Say you're working with your partner out there, and you've got to change more often, that's when it's going to get crazy, because you lose a lot of speed, and the guys that are not changing, that are behind you, come flying up on you really quick, and if they don't have a lot of room, and everybody doesn't know what's going on, bad things can happen. The change in the radiator to make us change more often -- I don't really see what we're trying to accomplish there and how that can bring about any good. I think that will just put us all in difficult situations."

  • Golden Taters
    RIP West
    • Jul 2009
    • 6640

    #2
    NASCAR has mandated that drivers and spotters will not be allowed to communicate with other drivers over their in-car radios in an ongoing effort to eliminate tandem racing at restrictor-plate tracks.

    The decision was confirmed Thursday as teams prepared for the first of a three-day test at Daytona International Speedway, a tuneup for the Feb. 26 Daytona 500.

    In the past few years, drivers and spotters have had the ability to talk to multiple teams over their radios, using them to coordinate which cars would pair up and to help drivers switch from pusher to pushee.

    By eliminating such communication, NASCAR hopes teams will have a more difficult time making deals and remaining in pairs. The driver doing the pushing especially needs this communication because he has little to no visibility. It was so refined that one spotter would communicate for both drivers, even if one of them wasn't with the spotter's organization.

    This is racing's latest rule change to address the two-car tandem that surveys indicate fans would like to see eliminated. Although the rule was designed with tandem racing at restrictor-plate tracks in mind, it applies to all races.
    NASCAR has mandated that drivers and spotters will not be allowed to communicate with other drivers over their in-car radios in an ongoing effort to eliminate tandem racing at restrictor plate tracks.


    Interesting change, especially since this is is applying to every track, and not just the superspeedways.

    Comment

    • nflman2033
      George Brett of VSN
      • Apr 2009
      • 2393

      #3
      Yeah I have been following this for a few months back before last season ended and they were doing tests. I am not sure I want pack racing back, but anything has got to be better than tandem racing.

      Comment

      • Golden Taters
        RIP West
        • Jul 2009
        • 6640

        #4
        Originally posted by nflman2033
        Yeah I have been following this for a few months back before last season ended and they were doing tests. I am not sure I want pack racing back, but anything has got to be better than tandem racing.
        I agree, tandem racing...

        :fedor:

        Comment

        • Woy
          RIP West
          • Dec 2008
          • 16371

          #5
          Yeah tandem racing was lame last season, but it did make for some exciting finishes.

          I wanna see driving more like this though, obviously:

          [ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=la52ZQBdv2w"]2000 Talladega Win - YouTube[/ame]

          Still remember the ending to this vividly. R.I.P. #3



          ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

          .

          Comment

          • Golden Taters
            RIP West
            • Jul 2009
            • 6640

            #6
            Originally posted by JayRock
            Pack racing as it was back then was awesome. Last years 500 sucked.
            It was interesting, to say the least. Nice to see the Wood Brothers back in victory lane.

            Comment

            • Golden Taters
              RIP West
              • Jul 2009
              • 6640

              #7
              Originally posted by JayRock
              I thought it was funny how everyone crowned Bayne after that race. I was definitely rooting for him during the race and was excited he won, but its a god damn Superspeedway. The next race at Phoenix (IIRC?) they were all talking about if he'd win.

              I laughed.
              I see your point, but it's the Daytona 500. It took Dale Earnhardt until 1998 to finally win one, and some barely 20 year old kid on a small team was able to do it. It wasn't so much that they were talking about his skill as a driver, but ESPN hyping a story up like they typically do. At least how I viewed it.

              Comment

              • nflman2033
                George Brett of VSN
                • Apr 2009
                • 2393

                #8
                Yeah super speedways are honestly anyone's race, its just the prestige of winning the 500 that is glamorous, the best guys win on the other tracks.

                Comment

                • Woy
                  RIP West
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 16371

                  #9
                  Originally posted by JayRock
                  Yeah this is what I was trying to say. Anybody could win the 500. No small team with a rookie driver is going to win a race on a normal 1.5 mile track.


                  Not really a rookie...but yeah.



                  ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

                  .

                  Comment

                  • Woy
                    RIP West
                    • Dec 2008
                    • 16371

                    #10
                    My point still stands.



                    ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

                    .

                    Comment

                    • j.hen
                      Self Care
                      • Oct 2008
                      • 10058

                      #11
                      Are they still going to be turning left?

                      Comment

                      • j.hen
                        Self Care
                        • Oct 2008
                        • 10058

                        #12
                        Originally posted by JayRock
                        All but two races.

                        Comment

                        • Woy
                          RIP West
                          • Dec 2008
                          • 16371

                          #13
                          Jay, who do root for? I don't think you've told me.



                          ^ Shouts to MvP for the sick sig. GFX TEAM BACK

                          .

                          Comment

                          • nflman2033
                            George Brett of VSN
                            • Apr 2009
                            • 2393

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Woy
                            My point still stands.
                            Talk about the exception to the rule it happen 1 time out of 30 last year (36 - 4 super speedways - 2 road courses = 30)

                            And that's in a year that had the most parity NASCAR has seen in years.

                            Comment

                            • nflman2033
                              George Brett of VSN
                              • Apr 2009
                              • 2393

                              #15
                              Originally posted by JayRock
                              David Stremme.

                              My dad actually used to race locally at a place called New Paris Speedway and later at a nicer place called Kalamazoo Speedway. I grew up around the track and was a gigantic NASCAR fan growing up. I started to grow out of it after he stopped racing in 2000 (iirc) and totally was done with it in about 2003 or 2004. It just got more and more boring to me. I used to sit and watch every Saturday and Sunday and loved it. The biggest reason I started to drift away from the sport is playing baseball throughout all of my summers.

                              Anyway, us and the Stremme's were the two most "normal" people at the track. Everyone else is straight, stereotypical hillbilly. My dad was close with David's dad Lou, and when David started racing (illegally, too young) in like 1993 my dad and him became good friends. They were around each other a lot and are still good friends. David ended up making it big and we all still talk with each other. David's brother (Bobby), dad (Lou), and mom (Cindy) all still race around here every Saturday night. My dad and I usually will go to a race or two and talk to the family. We usually get to talk to David a solid amount every year, too.

                              That's a lot of explanation but there aren't a lot of Stremme fans so I figured I'd explain. When David's not racing or when he's not in contention (so pretty much every week), I like Kyle Busch.
                              Good to see someone else who likes Kyle Busch

                              Comment

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