Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: SATURDAY, February 11, 1995 TAG: 9502140045 SECTION: SPORTS PAGE: B-5 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: BOB ZELLER STAFF WRITER DATELINE: DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. LENGTH: Medium
On a day when the new Chevrolet Monte Carlos were making most of the noise at Daytona International Speedway in practice for today's Daytona 500 pole qualifying, Bill Davis' Pontiac team stole the headlines.
Davis and Co. did it by getting caught with one of the most elaborate cheating devices ever found on a Winston Cup car.
NASCAR fined the Thomasville, N.C.-based team $35,100 after discovering a driver-controlled hydraulic pump designed to lower the deck lid on the No.22 Pontiac driven by Randy Lajoie.
``This was a pretty elaborate apparatus,'' said Kevin Triplett, a NASCAR spokesman. ``A lot of thought had gone into it.''
Although Davis said he intended to appeal the penalty to the National Stock Car Racing Commission, it may be only a matter of trying to get the fine reduced.
``We just got caught,'' said Chris Hussey, Davis' crew chief. ``They were doing their job and we were just trying to do ours.''
Here's how NASCAR's Triplett described the device:
``The apparatus was designed to alter the height of the entire rear deck lid. There was a driver-operated three-way switch connected to a hydraulic pump by the clutch pedal. Hydraulic lines ran from the pump through the framework of the car up to the trunk to allow the alterations.''
The deck lid could be lowered by about a half-inch. Lowering the deck lid also lowers the rear spoiler, which reduces the drag created by the air flow over the spoiler, thus allowing the car to go faster.
The device was not found in the inspection bay, but at the gas pumps, when LaJoie pulled in during afternoon practice. It appeared to NASCAR inspectors that nuts on the pins to hold the rear deck lid were loose. But they weren't loose. They had been constructed that way to allow for the movement of the deck lid.
NASCAR fined Davis $25,000 and LaJoie $10,000. Hussey was fined $100 and put on indefinite probation.
Otherwise, the story of the day was Chevrolet, as well as one powerful Ford driven by Dale Jarrett and one quick Pontiac driven by Michael Waltrip.
After a full day of practice, Terry Labonte's Chevy was fastest, at 193.316 mph, followed by Jarrett (192.860 mph) and Waltrip (192.831). Then came the Chevys of Bobby Labonte (192.020), Steve Grissom (191.726) and Jeff Gordon (191.677).
Unofficial timers had Labonte and Jarrett faster, approaching 194 mph.
Those speeds will be meaningless by 2 p.m. today, when qualifying starts for the first two starting positions of the Daytona 500 on Feb.19. But after weeks of winter preparation and a month of testing here, everyone was keeping track of the speeds as all the Winston Cup cars practiced together for the first time in the 1995 season.
``The story? The Chevys are real fast,'' said Steve Hmiel, Mark Martin's crew chief.
``Every one of them is quick. There's not a slow one in the bunch,'' said driver Ricky Rudd.
``That Monte Carlo is an awfully good car,'' Jarrett said. ``It's certainly not the same car I drove before I left that camp. They've made a lot of changes, obviously for the better.
But there was a fast Ford to match them, and, as usual, it was Robert Yates' Ford, with Jarrett behind the wheel.
``We've got a good shot at the pole,'' Jarrett said.
``Right now we've got a pretty good-sized bubble going,'' Yates said. ``We don't want to get too pumped up, but we've worked hard on qualifying.''
But NASCAR has thrown an extra wrench in the qualifying story by enacting what amounts to an across-the-board ban on special qualifying radiators that many teams had spent hours refining during the winter.
This new rule had teams scrambling Friday to gauge its impact.
There are various versions of the qualifying radiator, but basically it's heavier and has more water capacity. Some of them can be packed with ice or dry ice.
All of them are designed to increase the cooling power of the radiator for the two-lap qualifying run. This allows the teams to cover, or block off, virtually all of the front grille openings that allow air in the engine compartment to cool the engine. With the grille openings covered, the aerodynamics of the car are better and it goes faster.
Keywords:
AUTO RACING
by CNB