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| Sprint Cup Forum NASCAR Forum. ShortTrack to SuperSpeedway, come trade some paint with other race fans. Talk about everything that's NASCAR racing in our NASCAR Forum. |
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| Another Toyota Question Bob is confused; can someone clarify something for me? The following was lifted from an article posted on Jayski. It is, in part, a release from Team Red Bull and Toyota: "And mum's the word with Gaunt (Toyota NASCAR Competition Director). When will he name drivers? "We haven't put a timetable on it, though obviously we'd rather do it sooner than later. When the time is right, we'll do it," Gaunt said. "We're going to run three races near the end of the year; hopefully we can clarify which three soon. And we'll be doing some testing throughout the year.(Winston Salem Journal)(5-21-2006)" I didn't think the Camry was approved for competition this season, but starting with the first Daytona tests of 2007? Is Toyota going to run three races with Chev, Ford or MOPAR, just for drill? Or <gasp!!> is NASCAR going to give special consideration to Toyota and let them compete in a yet-to-be-approve car? They refused to do it for Penske back in 1992 when he had three sleek Lincoln Mark IV's ready for Rusty. Would NA$CAR allow Toyota special treatment, especially if Brian France were involved? Naaaaaw! Not Brian, our favourite bean-counter. <choke and gag>
__________________ "If we can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people, under the pretence of taking care of them, they must become happy." -THOMAS JEFFERSON 6 days until R&R in Key West |
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| Re: Another Toyota Question Quote:
Last edited by Quality88 : 05-29-2006 at 09:30 PM. |
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| Re: Another Toyota Question Quote:
If I'm not mistaked (and I easily could be) this rule dates back to 1952 when some Plymouth owners tried to put Dodge, DeSoto, or Chrysler Fire Dome V-8's in their cars. Of Course it was "etched in stone" (since 1956, of this I'm positive) that no team owner could have more than two teams entered in a race. It was also "etched in stone" that no model auto could be approved for competition unless it had at least five hundred units of the exact model sold to the public. (I never saw any of those five hundred 2-door Taurus coupes which the public must have bought??) Like any politician NASCAR will, I'm sure, do anything to accomadate its most generous contributors. |
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| Re: Another Toyota Question Quote:
I'm a bit in the dark as to Ford leaving. I don't remember them completely leaving but they cut way back on support when all manufacturors chopped "offical" factory support in ??? 1974?? They also threatened a pullout when NASCAR wouldn't approve their OHV racing engine. As I stated, I'm a way bit fuzzy on this. Someone with less Teflon on their brain than I have will be able to answer the question better, in more detail and exactness. |
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| Re: Another Toyota Question From what I understand, the Toyota engine is based on the Ford Cleveland powerplant which is run by the Ford teams now. Why Waltrip would run a Chevy towards the end of the season is beyond me. I really dont know if Chevy ever actually pulled out of competition, but I do know they didn't do squat until they lowered the cubic inch limit back in the late 70s and was able to use their small blocks. Their big blocks were no match for the Dodge/Plymouth 426 Hemis and the 427 and 429 Fords back in the day. |
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| Re: Another Toyota Question Posted on Wed, May. 31, 2006 ![]() ![]() Two of Toyota's NASCAR Truck teams eyeing Cup races By MIKE HARRIS The Associated Press Toyota might have more than three teams in its debut year in NASCAR’s Nextel Cup series after all. Jim Aust, vice president of Toyota Motorsports and president and CEO of Toyota Racing Development, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that two of its current teams in the Craftsman Truck Series are hoping to run some races in 2007 with the new Car of Tomorrow that NASCAR plans to launch at Bristol next spring. Germain Racing, which fields trucks for Todd Bodine and Ted Musgrave, and Wyler Racing, which has Jack Sprague as its truck driver, have told Aust they are looking for sponsorship to run a limited Car of Tomorrow schedule next season. The Car of Tomorrow is a bigger, boxier vehicle with a front-end splitter that NASCAR has designed to eventually replace the slick aerodynamic models that manufacturers spent the past 10 years developing. The Car of Tomorrow is scheduled to run in 15 races next season in a phase-in process that will be complete by 2009. NASCAR officials held the latest Car of Tomorrow test on Tuesday at Lowe’s Motor Speedway. Only Chevrolet and Dodge took part. Ford teams didn’t participate because they are waiting for NASCAR to approve a final car design before they begin building another model, and Toyota didn’t have a car at the test because its Car of Tomorrow is not yet completed. The next test is Aug. 21 at Michigan International Speedway. Aust said it was something of a surprise when the Germain and Wyler teams approached him about competing in Cup next year. “We had planned on only running three teams and six cars next year, but these guys came forward and said they’d like to look into running some races with the Car of Tomorrow to test the water,” Aust said. “This just came up in the last couple of weeks. “Both teams have said they would like to eventually come up into the (Cup) series sometime in the next couple of years and this could be a good test for them.” Aust said the teams are uncertain at this time how many races they would run in Cup in 2007 but that their schedules would definitely not include any races with the current cars. “It doesn’t make any sense for them to invest in current cars and run only a part of the season,” Aust said. He said each team is looking at running just one car, with Bodine, a former Cup driver, in the Germain entry. Aust said the Wyler team has not decided who would drive its car. Toyota announced in January that it would run six cars in Cup in 2007 – two each with the new Michael Waltrip Racing and Red Bull teams, and two with the Bill Davis Racing organization that now races Dodges. So far, the only drivers confirmed for any of those teams are Waltrip and former Cup champion Dale Jarrett, who will drive for him. Asked if any of its other truck teams might step forward with Cup plans, Aust said, “I don’t think there will be any more than that.” |
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| Re: Another Toyota Question Here's my question... If the "cars of tomorrow" are meant to replace the more aerodynamic ones of today... then WTH are they debuting them at tracks where aerodynamics do not come into play. IE.. BRISTOL. Makes no sense. |
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