NASCAR announces manufacturer badge added to Gen-6 windshield during first stop in Road to Daytona
Feb. 5, 2013
By Scott Held
Special to the NASCAR Wire
DETROIT,
Mich. -- NASCAR used the birthplace of America's auto industry as the
kick-off point in the latest phase of the Gen-6 race car's introduction.
During
today's Autoweek Racing Conference -- the first stop on the NASCAR
#Gen6 Road to Daytona Fueled by Sunoco -- NASCAR President Mike Helton
continued the rollout of the Gen-6 platform, the sport's first revision
since 2007.
"We've
found that four of five of our fans have an affinity for the brand of
car," he said. "A lot of those relationships are even older than the
relationship with their favorite driver."
During
Tuesday morning's panel, Helton announced that the manufacturer's brand
badge will now flank the drivers' names atop their windshields.
"We
believe this will help build the identity of the driver with the race
car and their relationship with the manufacturer," he said.
To
that end, NASCAR worked closely with Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota to
develop new cars that match the profiles of stock models sold in
showrooms.
This sixth generation of car will more closely resemble the cars fans
can purchase.
The
new cars feature body panels unique to the Ford Fusion, Toyota Camry
and Chevrolet SS, and Kim Brink, NASCAR's vice president of brand,
consumer
and series marketing, said its part of an aim to strengthen the way
fans view the cars on the track vis-a-vis the cars sold in showrooms.
"The new car is a game-changer for us in marketing," she said.
Manufacturers
usually adapt a race car's design after a production car hits
showrooms, but Chevrolet will turn the tables in Daytona when it
introduces
the 2014 SS. The NASCAR model will race later that evening in The
Sprint Unlimited and Jim Campbell of Chevrolet Performance Racing said
the automaker will debut the production car in the fan midway at the
speedway.
Monday's roundtable took place less than two miles from General Motors Corp.'s downtown headquarters.
Robin
Pemberton, NASCAR's vice president of competition, said the new cars
also will feature new safety enhancements in the roll cages and are
about
150 pounds lighter than last year's models. Feedback from drivers, he
added, has been good so far but everyone is waiting to see what happens
when the first green flag drops.
"We'll
see what happens when they're door-to-door," he said. "Right now it's
just been individual tests and guys driving by themselves."
Also
in attendance at the panel session held at the College for Creative
Studies were Jamie Allison, director of Ford Racing, and David Wilson,
senior vice president of Toyota Racing Development.
The
media blitz continues tomorrow at ESPN's Bristol, Conn., headquarters
and also will make stops in New York and Jacksonville, Fla., before
arriving
in Daytona Beach for the start of Speedweeks. The 55th running of the
Daytona 500 is Feb. 24.
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