About 5 weeks from the Clash at the Coliseum (2/6), which I think is a bad idea with a temporary track, new car, and across the country from Daytona.
Some NASCAR news to tide you over.
https://www.news-journalonline.com/story/sports/motorsports/2021/12/28/nascars-next-gen-testing-finds-issues-should-expected-q-a-martin-truex-kyle-busch-mars-inc-m-ms/9018620002/
https://www.nascar.com/news-media/2021/12/21/cup-series-2022-next-gen-rules-configuration/
Some NASCAR news to tide you over.
https://www.news-journalonline.com/story/sports/motorsports/2021/12/28/nascars-next-gen-testing-finds-issues-should-expected-q-a-martin-truex-kyle-busch-mars-inc-m-ms/9018620002/
Quote:
Uh-oh, Next Gen issues?
When you roll out a new generation of race car and begin group-testing at a variety of tracks, you know you'll find issues that simply can't be unearthed in the lab.
Tweaks, changes and maybe even full-blown do-overs are expected, though not desired. But when you throw in issues with the supply chain as well as a new wave of positive pandemic tests, there must be days when NASCAR's R&D folks feel like Sisyphus pushing the Next Gen rock.
NASCAR and the teams are pushing hard to have all kinks ironed out before the Next Gen's debut at the Feb. 6 Busch Light Clash.
This quote from Martin Truex Jr., to Fox Sports, wasn't quite enough to set off panic, but it didn't relax anyone: "The car is not where it needs to be, and people are scrambling," Truex said. "We've got to make some changes. We need to make it better so we can race with it, put on a show for the fans."
Mark this down: Whatever the final product, they'll never find a mechanical combo that pleases all constituencies fans, drivers, owners, engineers, NASCAR, networks, etc.
https://www.nascar.com/news-media/2021/12/21/cup-series-2022-next-gen-rules-configuration/
Quote:
NASCAR officials set the rules configuration for a majority of tracks on the 2022 Cup Series schedule Tuesday, announcing that the Next Gen car will use a 4-inch rear spoiler for downforce and will use engines with 670 target horsepower as a baseline.
The determination came after a meeting with competition officials, drivers and representatives for teams and manufacturers at the end of two days of testing last week at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Those sessions marked the final tests scheduled this year for the Next Gen car that will make its debut in the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series. The rules package for superspeedway events will be determined later.
Competition officials worked with teams to try four engine/aerodynamics configurations last week on Charlotte's 1.5-mile oval layout. Officials said the fourth and final package a higher 670-horsepower figure and a centered 4-inch rear spoiler for reduced rear downforce received majority support from those attending Friday's post-test meeting.