R
redriver6
Guest
ol Marcos flirting with 200mph.....
http://msn.foxsports.com/nascar/cup/raceTrax?gameId=20110702009&state=PRACTICE
http://msn.foxsports.com/nascar/cup/raceTrax?gameId=20110702009&state=PRACTICE
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The Staff of SOH
He is quite capable and has a good car but sure has a lot of bad luck.Be good if he could carry it through to a race win but I doubt it will happen.
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And Marcus won't win, he isn't one of the 'Inner Circle'.
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Hey All,
It's Daytona - a restrictor plate track. What do practice speeds really mean?
Was he in qualifying trim or race trim? Many teams (those in the top 35) don't even bother trying for the pole as you can sit at the tail end of the field and still win the race. Track position means very little in restrictor plate races.
-Ed-
So did Montoya take after Spencer, or was it the other way around?
Restrictor plates are about as clever as dogchit and twice as nasty!
The proper equipment for keeping speeds down is a rev-limiter, which seems to be too sensible for NASCAR.
Hey All,
I disagree - I think restrictor plate racing adds a completely different aspect to NASCAR racing. A very good exciting one. I hope NASCAR never loses the carburetor for fuel injection either unless they can find a way to maintain restrictor plate style racing even with fuel injection.
Rev limiters - bad idea - all they do is protect the engine from drivers who can't coordinate clutch and gas - we don't want that. The whole idea that a driver can "blow" an engine due to poor management of clutch, gas and gears adds an element of excitement/suspense to racing. Engine durability was the whole idea behind the Coke 600 - would the engines last? Don't want to lose that either. Besides rev limiters don't limit speed depending on what you do with transmission and rear end gear ratios.
-Ed-
Hey All,
I can't find anything that says definitively whether or not NASCAR engines have rev limiters. My understanding is they do not as I do know that drivers can "blow" engines by over reving say at a take off from a pit stop or a missed shift. This is a good thing as it makes drivers have more skill.
As I understand it a rev limiter simply places a limit on the rpms an engine can achieve by affecting engine timing and of course would be set at a point past peak hp. That would allow engines to make more power more quickly if they were used at tracks like Talledega but I don't think that a rev limiter fundamentally reduces hp which is the whole point of what is desired. Engines at restrictor plate tracks make around half the hp they do on other tracks. It is the reduced hp that creates Talledega/Daytona style racing - whether it be the "packs" of the past or the two car "hookups" that we see today since the tracks are so much smoother. As the drivers continue to adapt to the new circumstances we may see the "pack" mentality come back but right now making the third car in line "work" is a problem.
The whole point to NASCAR is the variety of circumstances - tracks and cars (and of course the fenders and bumpers) that drivers have to be good at handling - that makes NASCAR so good.
-Ed-