June 12, 2012
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. -- There's a habit Austin Dillon's NASCAR Nationwide Series
team needs to break -- immediately -- if the driver of the No. 3
Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet hopes to win the series championship.
Bluntly,
the No. 3 team needs to stop failing inspection. Dillon's pole-winning
time for Friday night's Subway Jalapeno 250 at Daytona International
Speedway was disallowed after inspectors found an open cooling hose into
the cockpit of the car, a duct work violation that in theory would
provide an aerodynamic advantage.
Ricky
Stenhouse Jr., second to Dillon in Friday's time trials, gets credit
for the pole, but Dillon retained his pit selection, with pit choices
already having been made.
Dillon was required to start from the rear for Friday's race.
A
week earlier, Dillon's team was penalized when the winning car at
Kentucky Speedway failed the post-race height stick test. Crew chief
Danny Stockman was fined $10,000 and Dillon lost six driver championship
points, dropping him from the series lead.
Car
owner Richard Childress attributed the ride height failure (too low in
the rear) to a jack bolt that had worked its way loose on the bumpy
Kentucky racetrack.
Stockman
and car chief Robert Strmiska were on probation before the Kentucky
infraction for using unapproved upper front bumper covers at Richmond,
an infraction discovered on RCR and Turner Motorsports cars during
opening-day inspection for the April 27 race.
NASCAR
will review the cooling hose violation in its competition meeting early
next week and may impose additional penalties then.
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