Posted on 10/08/2012 7:12:52 AM PDT by rawhide
The wreck isn’t as nasty as I thought it would be, given all I’ve heard about it. It was wide but not deep, so to speak. Lots of cars involved but nothing horrific happening to any particular one of them. It’s the ones where a lone driver overshoots the turn and plows into something solid that tie my stomach in a knot. This was more like one of those melees they sometimes have on WWF.
Heard Roush say when they load the car for Talladaga he
considers it a write off
Jeff Gordon said he dreads going to the two high banked ones
Amazing no one was killed...that cars wheels in the cockpit
Scary stuff
No Junior... We watch for hours just because we hope it is a completely uneventful race.
:-/
Racing is dangerous. If it is too dangerous for you... You can always get a job working retail.
I remember hearing a few years back that he dropped some cash installing a gym in his house.
Well, since NASCAR has already stolen SAFER barriers and HANS devices from IndyCar, here’s another “innovation” for them to adopt and claim as their own...
For this season, IndyCar came up with a new aero package for their race at Texas Motor Speedway. The new package reduced downforce sufficiently that drivers actually had to lift for the turns and broke up the pack racing that resulted in the massive wrecks of the IRL era (and the crash at Las Vegas last year that killed Dan Wheldon). This year’s race at Texas was regarded as one of the best that IndyCar has ever run there. The same aero package was also used at Fontana for their season finale.
Maybe NASCAR could reduce the downforce enough that the drivers have to actually DRIVE, as opposed to stand on the throttle and pray the car ahead doesn’t get loose?
And as a side note, regarding HANS devices: I’ve learned from a friend of mine that while it does prevent basilar skull fractures and neck injuries, it puts a driver at a greater risk of closed-head injury.
Actually I thought it was a large but relatively mild wreck compared to what many drivers have experienced.
Rusty Wallace at Talladega
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RnBRgC_btW0
Geoff Bodine NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Crash
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmT3gQQdJm4&feature=related
Rusty Wallace’s flip at Daytona
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UE1-C-QCnlg
Mark martin scary crash-Michigan 400
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkDu1KLudYg
Bristol Motor Speedway Crash
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92av-puVQLY
That one belongs to Stewart.
Mears was just pushing the two car match up that is plate racing now and he couldn't see where Waltrip was aiming them. Waltrip was holding the bottom and they were coming on strong thanks to the run Casey's pushing them was giving them.
Stewart moved to block but that was essentially like walking into the path of an oncoming train. There wasn't going to be any stopping, only crashing.
It was all, Mr. "nobody better block me, I'm tired of being blocked" Tony Stewart who did it all. Let his ego suck on that for a while. As an owner, he understands the dollar damage he caused. Nice job, Tony.
My thought was not to change the aero package but to force the track owners to knock down the banking, particularly at Daytona and Talladega. Make the drivers lift and make them actually RACE again, not get in a line and all run the same speed bunched up together.
While the safety improvements incorporated into the COTS chassis makes them more crash-survivable, they are nearly impossible to egress quickly in an emergency. Nothing will change though until one of the superstars burns up trying to get out after one of these melee's...
HANS was developed by racer Jim Downing and Dr. Bob Hubbard from Mich State. It was first used in sports car racing.
SAFER was developed by the Univ of Nebraska with funding from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. IMS has both Indycar and Nascar races.
The perfect NASCAR crash...final lap,final turn.
Better sponsors.
“It’s bloodthirsty if that’s what people want.”
Of course that’s what people want. If it weren’t dangerous, far less people would watch.
It is embarrasing sometimes when writers try to find ingeneous ways of expressing simple facts, like cars being totalled.
In this case “acres of sheet metal”. Does the writer have any idea how many cars you would have to destroy to equal “acres” of sheet metal?
Yes ... I just read about that.
Hard to tell what’s really going on out there unless you’re in one of the cars that started it all. Kudos to Smoke for owning up to it. Apparently a bad move on his part.
I was actually expecting to see something like that happen but at the hands of McMurray. He was blocking left and right for a number of laps. Dangerous move on that track.
Everyone going in the same direction at the same speed = not such a big deal.
Now if half of them had been coming from the opposite direction...
Figure 8 Nascar Racing would be excitng too! /s
Yes up to the time of the COT standardized chassis, there was concern that the front structure was too stiff, which is great for vehicle handling but not necessarily crashworthy.
Now that design is standardized.
I’ve seen crashes of 50’s era Indy cars that rolled down the track like a hot dog on its side. When they came (rolled) to a stop it looked like a little suspension work would get them back on the track, but they’d need a new driver.
Shades of George Zimmerman.
Here’s one of them - it’s been sitting on the roof of a local business for 50 yrs, LOL.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.