Jeff Burton: More downforce and grip mean better racing
Jan. 18, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD,
N.C. -- With the notable exception of cars built specifically for
restrictor-plate superspeedway racing, NASCAR's new Gen-6
race car will feature more downforce and mechanical grip than its
predecessor, which debuted in 2007.
The way driver Jeff Burton sees it, that means the quality of racing will improve, almost by definition.
"My
theory is based on years of experience and watching what's going on
with this sport, how it's evolved," Burton said Friday before
testing the new car at Charlotte Motor Speedway. "We've been through
this thing -- a lot of downforce, little downforce; a lot of grip, low
grip; all these different tire combinations.
"At
the end of the day, the better the cars are stuck in the race track,
the closer the cars run to each other… Especially on big tracks,
the better the grip is, the closer the action can be."
Having
tested the Gen-6 car four times before coming to Charlotte, Burton is
convinced that the intermediate speedway package for the
new car will provide more downforce, more grip and, consequently,
closer racing.
"I
believe that more grip gives the drivers more opportunity to put their
car in a position that they wouldn't be able to put it, if
they didn't have that grip," Burton said. "That's why I think the
racing is going to be better."
As
far as downforce goes, the superspeedway cars, which NASCAR Sprint Cup
drivers tested last week at Daytona, are different. Because
of a smaller spoiler in use at plate tracks, there is less rear
downforce with those cars, but that characteristic almost certainly will
help eliminate the two-car push-drafting.
"To
be clear, the speedway cars have less downforce," Burton explained. "So
there's a lot less downforce on the Daytona/Talladega cars
-- assuming they don't change the spoiler between now and then -- and
there is quite a bit more downforce on every other car."
TRUNCATED TEST
Cup
drivers lost one day of testing at Charlotte because of heavy rains on
Thursday. Even though Friday's session, which started late
because of track drying, was extended to 7:30 p.m., several drivers
would like to get more track time before the series heads to Las Vegas
for the first intermediate speedway race of the season (Mar. 10).
"This
is a deal where we all roll out the new cars at the same time, and
everybody is trying to get a jump on the rest of the guys,"
said Martin Truex Jr. "If we think we need to learn more, or if we've
got unanswered questions, then we'll be somewhere testing next week."
Greg Biffle agreed.
"I
think a lot of it boils down to how well your car drove and then how
your speed compares and how much stuff we get through (on the
checklist)," Biffle said. "If the car is driving pretty good, the car
has fairly good speed, and it looks like there are no major issues that
we have to get figured out still, I think that there's a possibility we
wouldn't test again.
"But
if there's still unanswered questions or we don't have the speed or the
drive-ability, I get out there and I'm like, ‘I just can't
drive it. It's too loose. It won't turn as the fuel burns off,' and we
need to continue to test, we're going end up somewhere else."
The
Charlotte session was an official NASCAR test and doesn't count against
each organization's allotment of four tests at venues that
host NASCAR events. Teams also have the option of testing without
restriction at tracks that don't host NASCAR events, such as Nashville
and Pikes Peak.
BIFFLE STILL FAST
After setting the fastest lap in single-car runs last week at Daytona, Greg Biffle showed no signs of slowing down at Charlotte.
As
of 4 p.m. ET, Biffle topped the speed chart at CMS with a lap at
192.610 mph (28.036 seconds), not far off the track qualifying record
of 193.708 mph (27.877 seconds) he set on Oct. 11 of last year.
Clint
Bowyer (28.070 seconds) wasn't far behind Biffle at 192.376 mph. Joey
Logano, Juan Pablo Montoya and Kevin Harvick rounded out
the top five as of 4 p.m.
The
afternoon, however, wasn't without issues for Biffle, who scraped the
wall just before 5 p.m. and brought his car back to the garage
for repairs of minor damage.
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