
The first day of a group test at the Charlotte Motor Speedway oval on Wednesday proved eventful, with Austin Dillon crashing his Richard Childress Chevrolet, while newly-crowned 2021 champion Kyle Larson and veteran Denny Hamlin had spins.
Hendrick Motorsports suburbanite Alex Bowman reported that the new car was “real edgy and nonflexible to feel”, saying that he found it difficult to “know how much grip you have - and when it snaps it doesn’t seem like you can reservation it as well”.
JTG Daugherty suburbanite Ricky Stenhouse Jr echoed his comments, explaining that his first few laps on the track with the car were “hairy”.
However NASCAR’s senior vice president of racing innovation John Probst said that he wasn\'t concerned by the comments and welcomed the drivers finding it increasingly of a challenge.
“We don’t want the cars to be easy to drive, we’ve unchangingly said we want the weightier drivers running up front,” said Probst.
“I think if you squint at a lot of the changes that we’ve made to the car, a lot of the side-force that used to be in the car is gone so it’s not as forgiving as its been before.
“You saw some of that (Wednesday) morning.”

Alex Bowman, Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet Camaro Ally
Photo by: Ben Earp / NKP / Motorsport Images
The lack of side-force that comes from the worthier 18-inch wheels, larger tyre sidewalls - which Stenhouse said meant “you just don’t finger things as quick” - and the symmetrical shape of the car has been one of the big changes on the new machines, with Bowman predicting “you are going to see guys crash a lot more” while learning where the limit is.
Responding to the spate of incidents on Wednesday, Probst conceded that the new cars “are a bit edgier”, but predicted that set-ups will modernize that mitigate this.
“Certainly with the lack of side-force, that will be something (the drivers) will have to get used to with respect to how the car drives, how it recovers and if it’s loose, how far you can let it go surpassing it slides,” Probst said.
Wednesday’s reported speeds from the test were well-nigh 1.5 to two seconds off the pace of this year’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte.
While the speeds were slower – and the lower horsepower noticed by drivers – the differences in the Next Gen car still unsimilar the worthiness of drivers to push the car to its limits.
Stenhouse said the speeds felt “pretty slow … but when you do have a moment, it unquestionably scrutinizingly feels like you’re going faster.”
Probst said NASCAR would reduce the size of the rear spoilers during Thursday’s test from 8 to 7 inches to evaluate the respective transpiration in speeds (which should be faster).
He widow that a transpiration made to the cars prior to this test – the wing of rear window vents to write a heating issue that arose in a previous test at Daytona – are subtracting stilt and slowing the cars.
“We’ll run that and see where it gets us,” he said.
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