NASCAR officials, after a two-day post-race inspection at the Concord R&D center, have warned the #5-Mark Martin and #48-Jimmie Johnson teams [see earlier post below for more details], and crew chiefs Alan Gustafson and Chad Knaus, about going too close to the edge on body tolerances on their Dover cars, but NASCAR’s John Darby insists both cars are legal and there are no penalties coming. Darby said NASCAR may be taking the Martin and Johnson cars back to the R&D center “over and over and over again” after chase races, regardless of where they finish. “NASCAR’s job is to police the sport and manage the sportbut we also work very closely with the competitors on helping the competitors to make sure we get the right results (i.e., warning teams when they get too close to the line). Take any measurement: say the car has to weigh at least 3,450 poundsand if a car comes through inspection right at 3,450 pounds, we’ll point that out to the team and say ‘Hey, what are you doing? What’s wrong with putting two more pounds in therebecause you’re putting a lot in the bank that our scales are going to measure the same every time.’ We do it with engines, carburetors, everything. We owe it to the teams to do that. So (Tuesday, after the post-race inspection in Concord) we called the teams and said ‘This thing is passing, but.if the exact same car comes back next week, and if our inspectors are five-thousandths (of an inch) off, guess what you’re not going to be right at the tolerance, you’re going to be over it.”
“But the teams said ‘Our (own) measurements aren’t that close; they’re ‘this.’ So we said ‘Both cars are still on the (surface) plates; we’ll lock them down, and you can come over with your engineers and measure yourself.’ This would be Wednesday morning. And we walked through from the front of the race car all the way to the rear. I think they’re engineers learned why there was a discrepancy. And I feel good about going through that with them. Obviously as we go through the season post-race inspections gets to be so routine, like everything else.and then when you get something like this it throws up a bunch of red flags.”(MikeMulhern.net)(10-3-2009)
