Showing posts with label COT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COT. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 February 2013

Bemused, Bewildered, Confused, Or To Put It Another Way... I Don't Get It...

The 2013 Daytona 500 was... odd...

Old school drafting a la Earnhardt was back, and this is not a good thing in my opinion.

As I have documented in the past I am of the opinion that the two things the much unloved COT did well were keep drivers safe, and draft at Daytona and Talladega. In fact the cars drafted too well, and the bumpers lined up so perfectly that tandem drafting was born. We all know that NASCAR spent many hours trying to eliminate the tandem draft and to much success.

The first proper race of 2013 would show us what type of restrictor plate racing we would get with the Gen 6. The answer was the one I hoped I would not get... 90's pack racing. Drivers apparently unable to overtake without help, a lot of help. Drivers running round playing follow the leader until the very end. To be fair the early wreck didn't help, but that's not the answer to the fairly processional 500. That's not the answer, but what is the question?

Here is what is bothering me...

During and after the race Danica said she was only using part throttle while running in the draft. This alone is not surprising, in fact this is how it should be. What is surprising is the lack of overtaking by drivers with the loud pedal buried on the floor. The end of the race showed that the drivers and the Gen 6 could overtake, they just didn't. Why didn't more drivers "play" early in the race, find out what happened when they did pull out of the draft. Why didn't a few drivers get together to see what would happen? This was the Daytona 500 after all and no one looked like they wanted to win it, but they all looked scared stiff of losing it. If the drivers had that much accelerator to play with, why didn't they?

The questions are obviously... How does NASCAR make the racing better? Does NASCAR need to change anything?

The Gen 6 car is supposed to do two things, bring back manufacturer identity, and improve the racing. The first it does very well, a Ford now looks like a Ford, a Chevy looks like a Chevy, a Toyota...

The jury is still out on the second and to be fair will be for the first half of this year. Every time the cars race NASCAR, the teams and drivers, and Goodyear will learn a little bit more and by the time the Cup Series starts going back to tracks again we will see what this car can really do.

I do wonder if NASCAR will do something to the 'plate package to increase the closing rates and make it easier to overtake, but lets give NASCAR the chance to get this car right before we talk the sport we love out of business. I am not convinced much needs to change, just a few tweeks and am sure the powers that be will get the show right in the end.


While I think about it I get the feeling there are going to be two attitudes towards Danica Patrick, love or hate. Some will love her and see her as the new Earnhardt Jr, the fan favourite and darling of the sport. Others who hate her will see her as the new Earnhardt Jr, all talk and no action, a driver living off of a "gimmick", Dales is his name, Danicas her gender. I am not sure where I sit yet, I just know this, I would take pole, running up front all day, leading a lap and a top 10 finish in the first race of my rookie year thank you very much, especially when that race was the Daytona 500! The media circus around her might get a bit much at times, but as Keselowski said, she's just another racing driver so lets rate her on her performances in her rookie year, and so far shes done all right.


On a slightly different topic I do wish a speedy recovery to the fans injured at the end of the Nationwide race. Racing is dangerous, but no one want to see fans hurt supporting the sport they love!

Sunday, 18 November 2012

NASCARs Car of Tomorrow, Did it Work?

Monday morning the COT, NASCARs Car of Tomorrow race car, as we have known it for the last few years, will become the car of yesterday.

In 2013 NASCAR are introducing the next generation of race car but before we move forward lets look back at the COT's tenure in stock car racings top series.
 
So did it work?

To start to answer that we need to look at what the sport had pre-COT. NASCAR race cars had become very aerodynamic machines. The cars had very different bodies for each track to maximise aero efficiency and a Daytona car looked very different to a Charlotte car or a Martinsville car. The bodies were also "twisted" meaning they were different from one side to the other. It is fair to say they bore little to no resemblance to the road cars they were supposed to be based on. All the wind tunnel time and technology required to perfect those slippery bodies was also sending budgets through the roof. For teams and sponsors the sport was not as relatively cheap as it once was. Unfortunately the now infamous wreck in the 2001 Daytona 500 also highlighted the need to improve the safety aspects of the cars sooner rather than later...
 
The COT was introduced in 2007 with several goals, improve safety, lower costs for the teams, give the manufacturers more identity on the car, minimise the reliance on aerodynamics, and improve the racing.

The easy one of those to look at is the improvements in safety. We have seen some very big wrecks and some hard hits over the last few years and every time the drivers involved walked away. Nobody can deny that the combination of the COT, improved seats, SAFER barriers and the HANS device have made the sport much safer. Well done to all involved on that respect!

The other goals for the COT are harder to judge.

Has it lowered costs? On paper the theory seemed valid, no need for different bodies for each track meaning the number of cars the teams need to build can drop and no need for expensive wind tunnel programs. I am not sure if it has worked to lower budgets but the fact that several people have been able to set up teams by purchasing cars from other teams must mean something.

As I have already said, the previous generation of race cars had become so unrecognisable as Fords, Chevys, Dodges or Toyotas that improved manufacturer identity was a big part of the COTs remit. In one way it worked, the manufacturers had more space to put their own stickers on the cars so the fans could tell which was which. The COT had a problem though. They were widely considered UGLY, and as all the cars had the same shape bodies regardless of manufacturer they therefore did not look like any of the road cars they were meant to be. The fans hated the new rear wings and the boxy fronts with the big splitter sticking out. Bigger stickers or not, fans did not identify with the new race car. Hate campaigns were started, mainly against the rear wing and the splitter which many fans thought stopped the cars looking like "stock cars". Part way through the 2010 season NASCAR replaced the rear wing with an old fashioned rear spoiler and for the start for the 2011 season NASCAR facelifted the COT removing the boxy front and replacing it with a move conventional smoother front air dam, like the previous generation Daytona cars. Fans still didn't like that the cars all looked the same, but at least they now looked like "stock cars".
 

The problem with the facelift was that the splitter and rear wing were there for a reason. NASCAR designed the COT to have a bigger, taller, squarer roof line, not only for safety but to also punch a bigger hole in the air, therefore increasing the draft. The rear wing created downforce at the back of the car while also allowing air to pass though it and onto the front of the following car in theory limiting the effects of aero push for the following car. Lastly the splitter gave the car a big shelf to catch air and help the front end.

Upsides... The cars sure could draft at the restrictor plate tracks! They drafted so well, and as the new bumpers lined up perfectly the drivers could bump draft much more easily compared to the old cars, that a new style of racing emerged at Daytona and Talladega. Tandem racing, where two cars could literally push each other around, became the order of the day. Fans hated it, and NASCAR has spent the last few years trying to minimise this effect, to, it has to be said, much success. Another upside of all of this was the return of the "slingshot" at the 'plate tracks. The COT reintroduced the last lap overtaking move. You didn't want to lead the last lap as the driver behind could pull out and slingshot passed you coming out of turn four a la Petty vs Pearson! The new car also had lower cornering speeds and for a while it looked like the racing at the mile and a half track was going to be better than before.

Unfortunately the COT also had its downsides. As well as the UGLY factor, and the fact that they all looked the same there were other problems. Firstly the cars kept getting airborne every time they wrecked. This was blamed on the rear wing which was doing what it said on the tin, as soon as the cars were turned sideways the wing was literally picking the back of the cars up off the ground and making them fly. This would not do.
 


So NASCAR facelifted the COT. The cars now looked better and stayed on the ground, which is a very good thing, but it has to be said that to me the racing has suffered ever since the wing was removed.

Aero push and track position have become huge factors on all tracks bar the restrictor plate tracks and the short tracks where aero is not an issue. The cars seem unable to run close together without getting upset by the leading cars air, exactly what the COT was designed to eliminate in the first place. Unfortunately none of this has helped improve the standard of the racing.

The other problem the early COT had was the drivers hated it. It was hard to drive, had far too high a centre of gravity so it rolled to much in the turns, the aero balance was wrong, and in the early days ate tyres for breakfast. Aside from the tyre issue, which was largely due to the fact that early on Goodyear were still learning how to make tyres for the new, higher downforce, heavier car, I had little time for the drivers complaints. Of course they were not going to drive like the old cars, they are not the old cars. Once drivers and teams stopped complaining and figured out how to make the new car design work for them the sport started to move forward, and NASCAR told them to stop complaining and get on with it!

So what does all of this mean for the soon to be old COT. Well the lessons learnt from the first COT were put to good use as the COT mark 2 was introduced into the Nationwide Series in 2010 with much success. All the cars have the same, newly redesigned body but the cars now have greatly improved manufacturer identity and better aero balance. The fronts of each model now resemble the road car in shape as well as sticker design meaning a Dodge Challenger now looks like the road car, and a Mustang looks like a Mustang! The cars also have all the improved safety features and it has been said the racing in the Nationwide Series has be better than in the Cup Series on many occasions.

Hopefully the learning process from the first Car of Tomorrow with the wing and splitter, to the redesign, to the Nationwide car will bring about a successful introduction for the COT mark 3, the 2013 Cup car.

Under the skin the cars are the same and again improved manufacturer identity and improved racing are the goals. We can already say that on the first count NASCAR have succeeded. The cars look like their production counterparts, and no one is going to say they are ugly this time! I just hope NASCAR have learnt the aerodynamic lessons, done their homework, and get it right this time. Next years cars need to be able to draft and slingshot at the Daytona 500 in February like the current car and continue the 100% safety record, but they also need to eliminate the aero push on the intermediate tracks and make track position a thing of the past.

NASCAR had good intentions for the COT and those intentions are still relevant today and going into the 2013 season. They may not have succeeded with all of the goals but they must get it right this time around.

No pressure then!

http://jameswright42.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/COT

Friday, 13 July 2012

Mid Season School Report

F1

How many different winners...

From how many races...

Alonso came from which position on the grid to win...

Late pass for the lead and lots of overtaking at Silverstone?

To steal a line from the end of the movie "Independance Day", "not bad, not bad at all!"

NASCAR

I think the phrase "must try harder" sums up this year. The two stories of the year so far have to be an overabundance of average, lacklustre racing for the most part, and Dale Jr wins ends his winless streak.

It's a good thing the restrictor plate package works so well!

The new spec car bodies debuting next year can not come quick enough!

BTCC

So far we know the new Civic is a very good car, period. We also know the MG6 is also a good car in the hands of Jason Plato... When it runs... And when Plato stops complaining...

Some really good racing this year, offset against some bizarre races where the drivers seemed hell bent on taking themselves out. The current grid format of qualifying, race 1 result gives the grid for race 2 and randomly reversing some of the front runners for race 3 is working very well.

I wouldn't be surprised to see some changes made to the NGTC cars for next year as the suspension gets damaged too easily when the cars race close together. Otherwise so far... So good!!

Grand Am

So far this year I have watched the Daytona 24 Hours, the Mid Ohio race and some of the Watkins Glen race... And I have enjoyed what I have watched! Good racing from the latest batch of Daytona Prototypes on some of Americas best road courses.

Keep up the good work!

Indycar

I was lucky enough to see the closing stages of this years Indy 500 but thats about it. I enjoyed Indy and from whats I read the season is going well.

Now lay off of the politics and concentrate on the product, the racing, for a while and spread the word!

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Toyota Camry





Another individual looking Sprint Cup race car.

2013 is going to be a good looking year for STOCK cars!

Friday, 27 April 2012

All Change Aboard The NASCAR Express

For years NASCAR stayed the same.

Same tracks, same schedule, same points system, same safety standards, same basic chassis, same engines, same carbaretteurs, same leaded petrol, fundementally the same old school, old tech, relatively cheap but hopefully high action racing.

Since the tragic death of Dale Earnhardt a lot has changed.

The point system has changed along with the schedule. The cars have changed. New safer COT chassis, new squarer not twisted bodies, new fuel in the tanks, new tyre compounds for the new car, electronic fuel injection! Budgets have spiralled, but has the racing suffered?

The tracks have changed too. Some old school tracks have been dropped to make way for more modern speedways. SAFER barriers have been introduced to all ovals and have been a very successful safety measure. Some tracks have been redesigned in the hope of makng the racing better. Variable banking has been introduced at several tracks, again in the hope of enhancing the racing.

Recently the people behind two tracks have been discussing the merits of variable banking. At Bristol Bruton Smith has announced his decision to remove the variable banking and put the track back to the way it used to be, while over at Kansas the owners are busy installing variable banking ready for their second Sprint Cup race of the year. Currently Homestead, Phoenix and New Hampshire all have progressive banking in the turns. So has variable banking actually helped make the racing better, or is it just a gimmick?

As far as the fans are concerned variable banking has wrecked Bristol Motor Speedway, hence Smiths decision to put his once great track back the way is was. However Kansas think it is the way forward for their venue. My question is this... How come the racing at the so called "cookie cutter" tracks, the mile and a half ovals is so dull? At Texas there was a complete lack of side by side racing, and while Kansas might have better it was not better by much. How can such wide open tracks with so many workable grooves provide such dull races, and will variable banking help?

Some say the fault lies with the tyres, some say it's the aero package, while the tracks must think it's them as so many are changing their layouts to try and create better racing. I think it might be a combination of the three, aero, tyres and track. NASCAR have spent a lot of time and effort over the past few years getting the racing right at the two restrictor plate tracks, Talladega and most importantly Daytona. Now it is time for NASCAR to go through the same process for the intermediate tracks.

For the "sport" of NASCAR to help grow the "business" of NASCAR, the "show" at these tracks has to improve... and fast... whether variable banking is the answer remains to be seen.

Some might consider change good, some bad, but more change is needed if NASCAR can get back to the heights reached in the 90's!

Que 2013 car???

Monday, 12 March 2012

Sunday, 11 March 2012

Hey Good Lookin' part 3...

2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Ford Fusion COT "stock car" vs. Road going Ford Fusion...

2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Ford Fusion COT mark 2 "stock car"... vs. New road going Fusion...












Now we have the best indication yet of how successful NASCARs new "stock" looking bodies for the 2013 season are... the Dodge Charger. The road car is the same, and we can tell how things have moved on...

2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Dodge Charger COT "stock car" vs. Road going Dodge Charger...











2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Dodge Charger COT mark 2 "stock car"... vs. Same road going Charger...


















Wow that's what I call a "STOCK CAR"!

2013 is shaping up to be the best looking year for the NASCAR Cup Series in a long time!

What's in store for the next generation Chevrolet and Toyota??












Saturday, 3 March 2012

Rule Breakers

Junior Johnson, Tim Flock, Smokey Yunick, Richard Petty, Ray Evernham, Gary Nelson, Tim Brewer, Chad Knaus...

All names who at one time or another pushed the envelope of what NASCAR would allow.

In the past the rules were not necessarily there to be broken, the rules were written on the back of what some of these guys tried and when NASCAR decided they didn't like it, the rules were written.

Some cars ran illegal engines, some tried to hold too much fuel, some played with weight, some with ride height.

Bit by bit NASCAR have got better at finding the illegalities, better at writing rules, but some still find ways to push the envelope, and at the same time NASCARs buttons.

There has been a long held point of "respect" between NASCAR and the teams in which NASCAR say, don't think you can get an illegal engine or body by us, because we are too good for that. Try other things and take your chances, but mess with a cars engine or bodywork... how dumb do you think we are?

When the COT was introduced and with it the "tech inspection claw" NASCAR made one thing very clear to the car builders and crew chiefs... do not mess with the bodywork!

Chad Knaus is one of our generations most successful Crew Chiefs... but also one of our generations best rule "pushers". This time he had C-posts on the 48 car that NASCAR didn't like, so they removed them. As a consequence of his actions both Knaus and his driver Jimmie Johnson have both received 25 point penalties, and Knaus has a $100,000 fine and a six week ban to worry about.

Chad Knaus has an eleven year career as crew chief. He has won five Sprint Cup championships with Jimmie Johnson but has also been caught and penalized by NASCAR nine times and suspended three times.

Of course the 48 team is appealing the penalties. Over the course of his career, Knaus has won one appeal!

Some might say that innovation, and therefore rule breaking is a fundamental part of a sport founded on "moonshine runners" going racing, but they are also a part of it's history.

What part rule breakers, and innovators like Knaus have to play in NASCAR's future, only time, NASCAR, and it's appeal process, will tell.

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

I Couldn't Help But Wonder...

With all this talk of bringing back "pack racing" at Daytona I couldn't help but wonder... Were things that much better way back when?

Old school "pack racing" was hold your breathe close, hold your breathe tense, hold your breathe dramatic. Fans loved it... Drivers hated it.
The trouble with "pack racing" was that one driver could not overtake on his own. The last lap pass for the win rarely happened unless the cars were two by two already. For a driver to overtake he needed 25 other cars to go with him. If he moved and they didn't he found himself on his own, going very quickly... backwards. The cars were so closely packed together on the high banks that one wrong move caused "the big one", and the drivers felt powerless to do anything about it.

Fast forward to 2011 and "tandem drafting". Drivers don't mind it but fans hate it. Yes the cars are a little more split up for the first 499 miles but the drivers can slingshot when it comes down to that final mile.

So back in the day a driver needed as many cars as possible pushing his if he decided to pull out of the draft, today one car pushing will do the job.

NASCAR seem to understand the need to limit the speed differencial between the tandem drafting and the ols fashioned pack drafting but hopefully they also realise the need to maintain the ability to race one-on-one.

Personally I am not sure a fully blown return to "pack racing" is as good as some rose tinted glasses make it look.


With all this enthusiasm surrounding the 2013 Cup Series Ford Fusion and with it a return to "stock" looking cars, I couldn't help but wonder... What was the last "stock" looking stock car?


Current Cup cars may not be the spitting image of a specific road car but at least they are more road car in proportion than the generation before and in my eyes make for a good looking "stock car" if no so "stock" car...

Did a road Monte Carlo ever look like this...






or a Charger ever have a front like this?






Or a Taurus look like this...








This is better...



Getting better, a Pontiac Grand Prix that looks like the road car, right down to the detail in the front and the overall shape... 



A Thunderbird from the same era, again thats what a T-bird looked like back then...






An Oldsmobile, again from the same era, and again looking like an old road going Olds Cutlass Supreme...
Same goes for the Chevy Lumina...
A little older and again they look like road cars, Buick on the high side and another T-bird down low...


So to find the last "stock" looking "stock car" it looks like we have to go back to the era of Lumina vs Thunderbird vs Grand Prix vs the odd Buick and Oldsmobile. They were still race cars but they were "stock" looking!

Despite all of this looking backwards I am excited about the future, the upcoming 2012 season, and what 2013 will bring!

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

Hey Good Lookin'

2013 NASCAR Ford Fusion...

When the COT was introduced I liked the idea. I liked the "non twisted" bodywork. I liked the square, upright stance that was a million miles away from the squashed bullet shape of the old cars. Most NASCAR fans hated the "styling" of the rear wing and the splitter though.

Bit by bit NASCAR have developed the COT. The rear wing has been replaced by an old fashioned spoiler and the unsubtle front has been replaced by a smoother look.

Then came COT mark 2, the Nationwide car. More manufacturer identity, better balanced, good looking.

Now comes the first look at COT mark 3... the 2013 Cup car.

With a Ford Fusion body we can now get an idea of what NASCAR is doing with the Cup car for next season. Looking lower and wider than the current car, with a very swoopy roof line and more shape to the sides, it is another racey, good looking car.

If NASCAR can allow the manufacturers this much freedom, this much identity... and keep the aerodynamic balance between the different body styles... they are on to a winner!

I like the overall look and the amount of Fusion detail work in the body. They might be stickers but it looks like the road car. I even like the hole for the rear licence plate!

We all know NASCAR cars have not been "stock" for quite some time but with this car they just got a whole lot closer!

Sunday, 4 December 2011

V8 Supercars "Car of The Future"

V8Supercars have unveiled the future of their series.

Faced with a limited number of elegible cars, and high development and running costs, the organisers put legendary driver Mark Skaife in charge of the next generation of Australian touring car regulations, known as the Car of the Future or COTF. 

Under the skin the cars are very different, while still being the same cars from the outside.

I had not realised this until now but the current V8Supercars still have live rear axles. The new spec cars will finally have modern independent  rear suspension. The cars also move to a transaxle at the back to help weight distribution. To aid safety a new stronger roll cage with improved side impact protection is mounted to a new floopan. The fuel cell also moves from the boot to inside the new rollcage, again a move to improve safety limiting the chances of the cell being damaged if the car is hit from the rear. The cars also get bigger wheels, now 18" instead of the 17's of the current race cars. Along with bigger wheels also come bigger brake discs.

To me the best thing about the new spec car is what stays the same. The cars will still have the same big V8 engines driving the rear wheels. The cars also look the same as they still have the same production based bodies.

What the V8Supercars web site is not making a big deal of, if I am right, is that the cars will be mechanically identical with the exception of the engines and bodies. This is to keep costs down and to keep competition close. The other big point of the new spec cars is to make it easy for other manufacturers to join the series.

Currently the series is based around cars from Ford and Holden (GM). Historically these have been the Falcon from Ford and the Commodore from Holden, both rear-wheel-drive sedans. However we all know that the vast majority of modern road cars are front-wheel-drive, and with the continued threat of the Falcon and Commodore going front-wheel-drive,  it looked tough for the series to ensure a rear-wheel-drive future.

The COTF regulations should ensure that top level touring car racing in Australia continues to be rear-wheel-drive and V8 powered as the chassis and mechanical package is standardised, regardless of whose body (Toyota?) is on the car.

The V8Supercars organisers seem to have a very good handle on equalising the aero packages across the Fords and Holdens while still basing the cars on production bodyshells. I hope this continues with the new spec cars and is as successful with any new manufacturers joining in.

Basically the series faced the same issues as NASCAR, with the COT, and BTCC, with the NGTC, those of cutting costs, improving safety, ensuring close competition, and encouraging  brand buy in.

NASCAR went for a standardised body and chassis, and have been developing and enhancing the identities of the cars ever since. COT mark 1 was not very successfull at differenciating between a Ford, Chevy, Dodge and Toyota. COT mark 2 or the Nationwide car to you and me, is much better, still standard bodies in terms of aero but with very different "faces". It will be interesting to see what COT mark 3, the next Cup car, due to be updated for 2013, looks like.

BTCC, with the NGTC, went for standardised mechanicals to keep costs down but still keeps the manufacturers happy by using road based shells to contain those mechanicals. The issue for me with the NGTC is that there appears to be a strange mix of front-wheel-drive and rear-wheel-drive, not always being based on the layout of the equivalent road car... rear-wheel-drive Audi anyone? 

I like the concept of the COTF, still V8 powered and to start with still Ford vs. Holden! I like that the series will be protected from the threat of front-wheel-drive road cars with the new standardised mechanical package. If the cars are safer and cheaper too, whats not to like?? 

Paying attention Mr Gow?