gasticker.com
HOME     GAS PRICES     INFO CENTRE     BOOK HOTEL ROOMS     HEADLINES     MESSAGE BOARDS
gas prices
British Columbia
Alberta
Saskatchewan
Manitoba
Ontario
Quebec
Newfoundland
and Labrador

Prince Edward Island
New Brunswick
Nova Scotia
Yukon
Northwest Territories
Nunavut
other resources
Canadian Personals
What's Hot at eBay.ca
CBC Headlines
Consumer Information
Industry Watch
Message Boards
Our Partners
Canada Watch Weblog
Garnet Knight
featured sites
 
 
Sponsored By:
Racing Rap

Sep 17, 2007

Through the Looking Glass with the Car of Tomorrow

Certainly the machinations at NASCAR often seem like a chapter from Alice in Wonderland, but the recent Car of Tomorrow testing sessions really make it seem as if we have all fallen through the rabbit hole to a very foreign place. Looking at it all through NASCAR's rose-colored glasses, perhaps it all makes sense. But viewed with an objective eye, one might think the sanctioning body had put both feet firmly in Bizarro World, where it is a crime to do anything well.

Why do we say this? Well, for two reasons, really. First, there was the objective of the test sessions at the famous Talladega Superspeedway -- to make sure the racecars went slow enough. Yes, let me repeat that. The objective of the test sessions was to make absolutely certain that the all-new, all-singing, all-dancing Car of Tomorrow racecars were slow enough.

Now forgive me for having spent most of my time on Earth and not on Htrae, which is the planet where Bizarro World resides, but where I come from, the goal was to make racecars go faster, not slower. So it is difficult to wrap my head around the fact that NASCAR has decided that it had better make sure this new racecar is slow enough, or there will be hell -- or should I say heck -- to pay.

NASCAR officials will tell you that they are doing it for safety reasons. Cars hurtling down the track at 210 miles per hour are apparently woefully unsafe, while cars hurtling down the track at 196 mph, the top speed of one of the test sessions, are apparently as safe as driving with Miss Daisy. Only the cynical would say that the real goal is to keep the cars so tightly bunched that there will be some great multi-car crashes, you know, the kind that the TV viewers really get a charge out of. But not necessarily what one would call "safe."

Oh, and there's another reason we were taken aback by the test. The method of limiting speed in the Car of Tomorrow is by adjusting the size of the restrictor plate in its carburetor. Yes, carburetor! Now try to find a current passenger car whose engine is equipped with a carburetor, yet the "Car of Tomorrow" has one.  Next, NASCAR will insist that each car have a riding mechanic and carry its spare tires on the rear deck.

What this all says is that NASCAR is about the show. And there's nothing wrong with that. Most of us love show business and love to be entertained. But let's be clear on what the goal of the COT testing has been -- it's to make better shows, not faster racecars. Welcome to Bizarro World. Please check your brains at the door.

Next Racing Rap>>
Legendary Drives
North Carolina #1 North Carolina #1

Blue Ridge Parkway Drive

This wild and remote southernmost stretch of the Blue Ridge Parkway will keep you alert at elevations above 6,000 feet with long stretches of high-flying ledges and rocky cliff faces.

More>>
Email Your Host
Jack Nerad

Get in touch with your host Jack Nerad, the head honcho of Driving Today.

Go>>



© 2000 Garnet Knight New Media Publishing. All rights reserved.
Send email to webmaster@gasticker.com with questions or comments about this site


This information is provided as a public service, but we cannot guarantee that the information
is current or accurate. Readers should verify the information before acting on it. The Web sites
linked to are created by or for organizations not known to us, and those organizations are responsible for the
information contained within their respective sites. Any specific comments or inquiries
regarding those sites should be directed to the individual organization.