Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Busch Light Clash At The Coliseum Groundbreaking Ceremony

Shovels full of fill & aggregate base material officially begin the transformation of the floor of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum to a quarter mile paved short track that will pay host to Next Gen NASCAR stock cars boasting 670 HP. Pictured with shovels from left to right: Dave Allen - Auto Club Speedway, Kevin Daly - Coliseum Assistant General Manager, Ben Kennedy - NASCAR Sr. VP of Strategy and Innovation, and Michael Waltrip - Analyst for FOX Sports and 2-time Daytona 500 winner.   Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

Busch Light Clash At The Coliseum Groundbreaking Ceremony

As construction begins on the quarter-mile, asphalt track for the Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum, NASCAR and Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum executives, racing event staff from Auto Club Speedway, and FOX Sports personality/2-time Daytona 500 Winner Michael Waltrip conducted a groundbreaking ceremony and were available for one-on-one interviews. 

For the first time since 1956, when NASCAR held a race in Chicago’s Soldier Field, the famed stock car racing organization will kick off its season not only inside a major city stadium, but with a short quarter-mile track. It will also be historic for the cacophonous debut of NASCAR’s seventh generation cup cars: The Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, Toyota TRD Camry and Ford Mustang. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

The thought came up in the annals of NASCAR, why don't we hold the introduction of the future racing platform in an attention-getting and iconic environment and do this while capturing the essence of first races on a short track where most drivers begin to learn their craft - racing!?!?!

This thought came to life in September and the Gods of motor culture, living in Los Angeles, did not allow any real blockages in the path of these great NASCAR visionaries and creative planners.  

To Anheuser-Busch executives who run the sponsorship side of the business this back-to-back big weekend visibility on a national basis, managed out of the West Coast, is all in a big brewers portfolio. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

The folks at Budweiser, the Busch Light title sponsor of the Clash, were more than happy at the open dates of February 5th & 6th 2022 since this did not conflict with their other large sponsoring duties set to be shown in activities surrounding the NFL's final game of the 2021 season - Super Bowl LVI, SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, CA on Sunday, February 13, 2022.  

Auto Club Speedway's Dave Allen is looking forward to "hosting" two races in the same month, in the same geographical basin, with the same racing series. Dave shares his thoughts in this Social Media VIDEO done live while standing on the new dirt of the floor inside the LA Coliseum. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021) 

NASCAR and Los Angeles City also began to recognize that the best folks to aid in managing the elements of a stockcar racing event - the timing, the crowds, the legalities - just might be the management of the Auto Club Speedway. It happens that after 3 races in Daytona, including the Daytona 500, the 4th season championship points paying race on February 27th, 2022 is planned to be held at Auto Club Speedway that is 2.0 miles in a very large "D" shape.  

Why of course they can handle a non-points paying race on a very small quarter-mile (micro) "D" shaped 2% banked track on the floor of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

This beginning layer protects the surface that was perfectly laid down for sporting contests on turf back in 2018 when the Coliseum went through a modernization upgrade with event suites and media facilities. Click HERE to see the NASCAR transformation in their first commercial advertising the Busch Light Clash. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

Busch Light Clash By The Numbers

130,000 Sq. Ft. of plywood and visqueen field protection

9,200 Cubic Yards of packed fill & aggregate base material

3,840 Ft. temporary track walls

6,900 Sq. Yds. asphalt track & apron paving

6,800 Sq. Yds. asphalt infield paving

1,400 Ft. track catch fencing

1,400 Ft. safer barrier perimeter 

Modification To Tunnel Entry
ENDS

META/FB Photo Gallery Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021) >>>
Without any clear description (in ads or website descriptions), one is left to assume that given the formats of the qualifications heat races and the length of the Busch Light Clash race overall plus the note of "Modification To Tunnel Entry" the pits for preparing/repairing cars for racing are outside of the stadium.

Michael Waltrip gets interviewed by KCBS2/KCAL9's Jim Hill. Michael was very impressed at the plans for this track and the use of the new Next Gen racing platforms. Said Michael “If this event goes well, you could see pop-up racetracks in a lot of big cities around America and NASCAR being the center of the stage.”   Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

This day's ceremony on December 21, 2021 took place exactly 100 years to the date after the venue's original groundbreaking and further follows two Summer Olympics (1932 and 1984 ... and scheduled again in 2028), two Super Bowls, a World Series, University of Southern California Trojan home football games, Los Angeles Rams, Oakland Raiders, Los Angeles Dodgers, Billy Graham Crusade (record 134,254 attendance), a motocross event that utilized the steps of the Peristyle end covered with dirt while the floor was transformed into whoops or moguls, Stadium SUPER Trucks 2013 Round #3 LA Coliseum SST On NBC with similar modifications to the floor and Peristyle end, concerts by the Stones, U2, the Who, Springsteen and numerous other headliners and JFK’s acceptance speech at the 1960 Democratic National Convention.


This race track is seriously becoming a reality. Image Credit: NASCAR via YouTube Commercial

Welcome NASCAR's Busch Light Clash to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, featuring the new seventh generation racing chassis and engine, which marks the first time the preseason Clash will be held outside of Daytona International Speedway since its inception in 1979. Again, it will give the sport its first competitive look at the Next Gen car on February 5 & 6 in a non-points event, embellished through a pre-race concert by Pit Bull. 

NASCAR Cup Series Clash exhibition race broadcast coverage GREEN Flag drops Feb. 6 at 6 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at the L.A. Coliseum >>> Schedule HERE.

... notes from The EDJE






TAGS: NASCAR, Busch Light Clash, Auto Club Speedway, Michael Waltrip, USC, Next Gen, 670 HP, The EDJE

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Motor Culture Bond Girls Galore On Display In "Bond In Motion" Petersen Museum Exhibit

Title exhibit of the "Bond In Motion" exhibit at the Petersen Automotive Museum's Mullin Grand Salon 1st Floor exhibit space. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

Motor Culture Bond Girls Galore On Display In "Bond In Motion" Petersen Museum Exhibit

This month, the long delayed and anticipated 25th edition of the 007 Bond feature length movie series "No Time To Die" was released to be shown in theaters only opened on Friday, October 8th, 2021. The worldwide opening came to a very successful $330,000,000 box office weekend and marked the end of the Daniel Craig era of the 007 Bond saga.

Billboard displays at the AMC16 in Burbank opening day of the feature presentation in the Dolby Sound enhanced Theater #14 of "No Time To Die." It is recommended that one watch both Casino Royal (2006) and Spectre (2015) before taking in "No Time To Die" so that one's mind is fresh with the storylines that feed this 25th edition of Bond, James Bond. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

Just one week in advance of this 25th film in the series was released, the Petersen Automotive Museum opened a new exhibit of the 007 Bond movie franchise titled "Bond In Motion" which features more than 30 cars, motorcycles, boats, submarines, helicopters and even scale filming models of aircraft from an array of both classic and contemporary Bond films. This exhibit represents some of the most memorable and indelible 3D vehicle art that, in their own way, delivered "Bond, James Bond" through motor culture creations (some custom, and some just perfect for the time of Bond) as strong as the story lines themselves.  

007 graphic from the exhibit hall floor. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

Bond 007 graphic from the top of the exhibit hall staircase. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

This exhibit is impressive on many levels, from the detail of the exhibit descriptions to the general display throughout the environment itself. One of the initial exhibits upon entering the hall that will command one's attention is the Bond defining 007 gun-enhanced graphic (above) placed in a two-story three-dimensional exhibit in the middle of the signature circular staircase that is a defining structural element of the Mullin Grand Salon.

This 1964 Silver Birch Aston Martin appears as the repeat signature motor culture Bond Girl ever since it first appeared in EON Productions' 1964 film Goldfinger. This heart-warming beauty went on to appear in Thunderball (1965), GoldenEye (1995), Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), Casino Royale (2006), Skyfall (2012), Spectre (2015) and No Time To Die (2021). In addition, the vehicle has appeared in the video-games 007 Racing (2000), Agent Under Fire (2001), From Russia with Love (2005), Blood Stone (2010), James Bond: World of Espionage (2015) and the Best of Bond DLC for Forza Horizon 4 (2018).Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021) 

As one might guess, an Aston Martin, especially a DB5, is never too far from one's gaze. The very first vehicle happens to be just that - a perfect DB5 in every way as shown in many of the 007 Bond films as a reoccurring friend - even in the last No Time To Die installment.

But enough about the easy hits ... what about the "Nellie" factor? A vehicle title that shows up twice - one is an up armored. assemble on demand, aircraft and the other is a luxury sports car that doubles as a submarine. 

LITTLE NELLIE

Bond flying Little Nellie in You Only Live Twice - Image Credit: JamesBondMemes.blogspot.com

Little Nellie (Wallis WA-116 Series 1) - Featured in You Only Live Twice (1967). A heavily armed gyrocopter that could be transported in several cases and quickly assembled in the field. Little Nellie, was designed and built by Wing Commander Ken Wallis and flown by him in the film, is one of the most celebrated vehicles in the James Bond series. In the film, James Bond uses the autogyro, supplied by Q Branch, to give reconnaissance of the Japanese landscape to find out where SPECTRE’s rockets might be launching from. A cine-camera fixed to Bond's helmet allowed him to photograph every inch. Image Credit Edmund Jenks (2012)

On the exhibit floor, Little Nellie appears as a graphic in the exhibit description that features a model of a Helicopter used in You Only Live Twice (1967) by SPECTRE to protect their missile/rocket launch site.

SPECTRE security used this Bell Helicopter to chase off James Bond flying Little Nellie. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)


WET NELLIE

The Lotus Esprit S1 (or Series 1) is a sports car that was built by Lotus in the United Kingdom between 1976 and 1978. The car gained fame through its appearance in the 1977 film, The Spy Who Loved Me, where it was featured in a long chase sequence on the Italian island of Sardinia; ultimately converting into a submarine. Appearing in the film's tie-in novelization and video game, the Esprit also featured in Storm Bringer (1985), 007 Racing (2000) and the Best of Bond DLC for Forza Horizon 4 (2018).

Q's Wet Nellie as it appears on exhibit with a moving light splashed over the exterior so as to emulate the Lotus Esprit S1 as a submarine under the water. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

OTHER "NELLIES" - as nominated

Custom vehicles that could have carried the the moniker Nellie given their unusual nature are scattered throughout the Bond In Motion exhibit. These apparatus tools, given their unique function and special appearances, earn a vote to be nominated Nellies simply because of the fun they bring to their film stories as the original Nellies had delivered..

Two candidates for the tag Nellie come from the movie Diamonds Are Forever (1971) for vehicles designed and/or built by two of the most famous customizers of craft in the film industry.

MOON BUGGY NELLIE - Built by Dean Jefferies

In the exhibit that features motor culture memorabilia from Diamonds Are Forever, the featured exhibit that shows a Honda ATV-90 vehicle that James Bond commanders to escape Willard Whyte's Tectronics Laboratory patrol agents as they try to track him down while he escapes a laboratory in a Moon Buggy.

1971 HONDA ATC-90. Image Credit : Edmund Jenks (2021)

Dean Jefferies crafted Moon Buggy. Image Credit: MGM/EON Productions via The James Bond Dossier (2015)

James Bond (Sean Connery) escapes Tectronics Laboratory located in the desert outside of Las Vegas in an experimental bubble-domed Moon Buggy that was in the laboratory's warehouse. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

BATH-O-SUB NELLIE - Built by Barris Kustom Industries 

This unique marine vehicle plays a pivotal role in Diamonds Are Forever where James Bond gets the upper hand against arch-enemy and head of SPECTRE, Ernst Stavro Blofeld.

Nellie candidate Bath-O-Sub with SPECTRE logo on the nose. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)
 
Exhibit description of Bath-O-Sub. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

Exhibit description of Bath-O-Sub scene with image. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

The last nominee for adding the name Nellie to a motor culture "Bond Girl" found inside of the Bond In Motion very special exhibit inside of the Mullin Grand Salon is originally called the Q Boat ... or as listed in the Salon as the Q Jet Boat..

PORPOISING NELLIE (Q Boat)

Featured in The World Is Not Enough (1999), PORPOISING NELLIE (Q Boat) was created by Q as a "fishing boat" for his retirement. 

Q Boat as displayed on the floor of the Mullin Grand Salon. Image Credit: Edmund Jenks (2021)

This unique craft came with missiles, torpedos, and a GPS tracking system. It could also submerge (porpoise) although the pilot either needed to have his own breathing apparatus or surface quickly before he drowned. However, this feature wasn't exactly finished when James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) took it for the defining opening action sequence which could account for why the pilot was exposed to the water when using that function.


There are many, many honorable mentions amongst these motor culture Bond Girls that could qualify as being dubbed a Nellie, and one may wish to explore the possibilities at the Petersen Automotive Museum soon.

Maybe, a good time might come just after taking in the latest in the 25 movie series, and Daniel Craig's final episode, No Time To Die in theaters only.


LARGEST JAMES BOND PROP AND VEHICLE EXHIBIT EVER DISPLAYED IN A U.S. MUSEUM 

NOW OPEN AT THE PETERSEN THROUGH OCTOBER 30, 2022


... notes from The EDJE


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TAGS: Aston Martin, EON Productions, James Bond, Lotus, Petersen Automotive Museum, 007, LITTLE NELLIE, WET NELLIE, Moon Buggy, Bath-O-Sub, Q Boat, Mullin Grand Salon, The EDJE

Monday, September 20, 2021

Tom’s Take: Inspiration… Move Me Brightly

Schumi takes a maiden Ferrari win at Barcelona. Image Credit: Motor Trend Archives

Tom’s Take: Inspiration… Move Me Brightly

By Tom Stahler


I just finished watching the Netflix feature, Schumacher. This marvelous document brought back many memories — as Michael and I began our big-time motorsports careers at the same time: MSC with Ford-powered Bennetton Formula One cars and me at Dearborn, Michigan’s Campbell and Company serving Michael Kranefuss at Ford’s Special Vehicle Operations division, as a young racing PR man.


This is not a story about our respective careers though. This is the contrast of top-tier race drivers of just 25 years ago and the silly children that drive in the series today. In just a quarter-century, drivers — and the populous for that matter — have changed significantly.


While everyone is talking about the Monza chicanery between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen — and a season that is stacking up to be a classic title-fight, ala Hill/von Tripps, Hunt/Lauda, Senna/Prost, Schumacher/Hakkinen — I am still lingering on the sad revelations of the 2021 Belgian Grand Prix.



For those of you out there with an attention span longer than a gnat, in this era of the 24-hour news cycle, tic-toc and rampant a-literacy, you may remember the race three weeks ago. A Grand Prix, run on the mythical Spa-Francorchamps Circuit, for two rainy laps behind a safety car.


Huh? What the actual fuck?


I woke up late on Sunday, 29 August. A Saturday night of revelry with friends here in my more recent home of Phoenix, Arizona left me a bit fatigued. Thank goodness for my F1TV subscription… no more VCRs or DVRs. The 6:00 am PST start time of the race would be personally abandoned in favor of walking the dogs, making a lavish breakfast of eggs benedict and hitting the play button on F1TV at about 8:30 am.


What I saw got my blood pumping immediately. Rain! Bucketfuls of glorious, equalizing, legend-crowning rain for the twitchy, open wheel monsters that were lined up on the grid. This is going to be a race! My mind trailed back to a young Ayrton Senna at Monaco and Donnington, Michael Schumacher at Barcelona and so many great rain races.


Then. Nothing.


No rooster tails. No wheel-choking overtakes. No pirouettes into pillow-like tire barriers. Nope. Just a bunch of pansy hairdressers crying about “not being able to see.” I was astonished, but sadly, not surprised.


As I fast-forwarded through the broadcast, absolutely sure there would be a race start soon, all I experienced was the droning on of the commentators, with nothing to report, and images of officials, drivers, team principals and crew looking like the famed Norman Rockwell painting, Tough Call — as the baseball umps surmised the droplets coming from the sky.


Image Credit: Art.com


Fast forward some more. Ah! A rolling start with a couple laps behind the safety car. Nope. Those two laps that carved through the moist mist of the Ardenne Forrest WAS THE GRAND PRIX! Thus proving that qualifying is now more important than the race itself in the face of inclement weather.


Disappointed? No. Frustrated?? You bet!


Baby Boomers and their kids, the millennials, have spent their efforts trying to remove the stink out of shit, creating a generation of pussies that would be laughable at a Grand Prix just 25 years ago. Seventy-six years earlier, on that same hallowed ground near Spa-Francorchamps, brave young allied soldiers slugged it out with the Nazis, and changed the course of World War II, in a six-week long, bloody counter-offensive, known in history books as the Battle of the Bulge. Sadly, the future leaders of the world do not possess the grit and determination of the generation that cleared an earth-wide swath for progress — and the most narcissistic generations in history, concerned only with selfies and upset about mean tweets.


Schumacher is about the grit and sheer determination of a middle-class kid from Kerpen, Germany, who along with basketball great, Michael Jordan, became the highest paid athletes in the world at the time. Schumacher’s ability to inspire his team, wring extra 100ths of a second out of a second-rate car, put in the time, blood, sweat and tears, resulted in a 5-peat of Formula One World Championships for Scuderia Ferrari. This was a hero! The drivers at Spa in 2021? Zeros.


What is wrong with today’s stars?


While a fortunate few in the last 30 years of Formula One got there on their abilities, Schumacher being the beacon, most of the drivers on the Formula One grid are dilettantes. Think Lance Stroll and Nikita Mazepin — to name the top lucky sperm club winners — whose daddys are billionaires. America’s Gene Haas’ car is painted in the national colors of Russia! Talk about collusion! Stroll’s father bought a team so he could control his son’s career. The further you go up the grid, it may surprise you how many “rent-a-rides” actually exist in the top tier of motor racing.


Image Credit: The Guardian

Earlier in the year, Mazepin, finishing dead last, with a number of mishaps through the weekend in his first Grand Prix, declared the experience “the worst day of my life.” Wow! if driving a Formula One car amongst the world’s glitterai with a checkbook worth $Millions, surrounded by “affordable” high-maintenance women is the worst day of your life, it’s easy to guess this is a guy who doesn’t have many bad days.

It also describes the elitist attitude these guys have. It shows in pure hostility for the fans who pay exorbitant amounts for a ticket to watch these young princes. Oh, during the interviews they robotically thank the fans (I’m sure its in their contract somewhere), but the real reason for the two safety car laps with an official result was so the promoters didn’t have to give a dime back to the ticket holders.


Think back to the 2005 US Grand Prix at Indianapolis when the lion’s share of the grid pitted before the start of the race because of “bad Michelins.” It was the same kind of arrogant farce as F1 raised its middle finger to the fans.


Racing in the rain. Making cars dance. Skill, no matter the chassis and engine, rises to the top. I know a number of female race drivers who would have gladly taken the opportunity to start a Grand Prix with the grid-equalizing rain. The emasculated (take a look at some of Lewis’ fashion statements) “men” who climb into these cars won’t race in a cloudburst. Sadly, it mirrors society today. Toxic masculinity? I think not. They are a bunch of girly-men.


This is why I enjoyed Schumacher so much. He was a family patron, a team leader, a champion amongst champions — and most of all a man.



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About the author: Tom Stahler has spent the better part of his motorsport writing career raising eyebrows, embarrassing dynasties, elevating historical footnotes to the forefront, and opining on the automotive world topics others in the business won’t touch. In the process Stahler has won numerous industry awards for his words including the Motor Press Guild’s Dean Batchelor Award, The International Automotive Press’ Gold Medal amongst others. He resides in Phoenix, Arizona with his two dogs “Enzo” and “Taffy von Tripps.”

Friday, April 16, 2021

Chevrolet Sets Table For 2021 And Gives Hints On Future Hybrid Engine Evolution Development

Felix Rosenqvist taking a break between testing sessions at the 2-Day IMS Open Test in his new Chevrolet-powered Arrow McLaren SP Dallara. This will be the first year he will compete in a Chevrolet-powered NTT INDYCAR SERIES ride. He posted a 16th fastest time in the 2-Day IMS Open Test. Image Credit: Chris Jones via NICS (2021)


Chevrolet Sets Table For 2021 And Gives Hints On Future Hybrid Engine Evolution Development

A pre-season NTT INDYCAR SERIES ZOOM Call was held in advance of the first race of the 2021 championship season. The call, held with members of the world press, was fairly open-ended and highlighted current developments on the 10 year old turbo-charged 2.2 liter specification racing engine, and gave additional information on the developments of the 2023 Hybrid 2.4 liter specification racing engine.

It was stressed that nothing will be left on the table for 2021 or 2022 in terms of continued evolution of improving performance power bands and reliability on the current 2.2 liter power plants as the all new 2.4 liter specification comes forward for 2023.


CHEVROLET RACING IN NTT INDYCAR SERIES - INDY GP OF ALABAMA - APRIL 17-18 - BARBER MOTORSPORTS PARK - LEEDS. ALABAMA

CHEVROLET ZOOM CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT - APRIL 15, 2021

MARK STIELOW, DIRECTOR OF MOTORSPORT COMPETITION FOR INDYCAR, IMSA,NHRA (CHEVROLET AND CADILLAC) 

ROB BUCKNER, CHEVROLET RACING ENGINEERING PROGRAM MANAGER FOR INDYCAR 

CONFERENCE TRANSCRIPT - MEDIA VIA ZOOM AND DISCUSSED OUTLOOK FOR NEW INDYCAR SEASON STARTING WITH THIS WEEKEND AT BARBER MOTORSPORTS PARK, THE INDY 500 AND OTHER FUTURE ENGINE DEVELOPMENT TOPICS. 

THE MODERATOR:
First of all, some introductions of two people who you probably have heard of but may not have met yet, we’re going to make that right today. 

The first is Mark Stielow, the General Motors Director of Motorsport Competition Engineering for the INDYCAR Series, IMSA, and NHRA for Chevrolet and Cadillac. 

We also have Rob Buckner, the Chevrolet Engineering Program Manager for the INDYCAR Series, as well.
 
Mark, let’s start with you. Please talk to us about what your overall expectations and goals are for the Chevrolet INDYCAR program ahead of the opening weekend at Barber.
 
MARK STIELOW:
“I joined the team back in September and am getting up to speed. We kind of got INDYCAR racing going after the COVID-19 hibernation we did; so, I got to the last couple of races in the season and then went into the off-season. There was a lot of work done by our engine partners and our teams to get us ready for this season. And I think we’re going to have some strong teams and I think things are going to look pretty good for us this year.”
 
Rob, it’s been a long time since we’ve been in action, but you were in Indianapolis recently for the open test. Talk with us about some of the highlights of that session and what you think we can look forward to in the opening couple of rounds.
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“Thank you everyone for taking the time to talk with us today. I know a lot of familiar faces, and miss seeing you on pit lane. We’ve been so limited. We used to do these types of things in person and now everything is a video call. Thank you for everything you have done to try to cover motorsports during COVID-19 and people not being at the track. Going into this year, it’s always great for us when we can run at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Track time testing there is very limited. We had a great two days there. We’ve already run over 8500 miles on our 2021 race engines and 4900 of those came from Indianapolis. So, we really ran a lot of miles over those two days in preparation. I think we learned a lot. We’re always working with our teams. Our engine program is always looking for any opportunity to improve and we’re excited to get going.”
 
Q&A’s:
 
Q.) A RECENT GENERAL COMMENT BY PENSKE DRIVERS WAS THAT THERE SEEMS TO BE A LITTLE BIT MORE TORQUE OUT OF THE HONDA ENGINE OVER THE CHEVY ENGINE. WHAT IS YOUR VIEW ON THAT EVEN THOUGH WE ALL KNOW THE ENGINE PERFORMANCES ARE EXTREMELY TIGHT AND EXTREMELY CLOSE?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“Yeah, it’s interesting. The 2.2 liters have been in competition for 10 years. And I think over that time, both us and our competitors have recognized and addressed some weaknesses that we’ve had, individually. Or, sometimes we’ve got a slight advantage somewhere and they always catch up. The general thought is we’ve always had a very strong top end and they’ve always had a very strong mid-range. I think we’ve kind of converged to a very similar torque delivery but all we can control is our own power profile going into this weekend, and I think we’ve got a very robust package for Barber. 

Team Penske's Will Power is looking forward to getting back on the track in his Verizon sponsored 5G machine. He's had great success at Barber Motorsports Park and he believes this season opener will be his. Image Credit: Joe Skibinski (2021)

To Will’s comments, the surface has a lot of grip. A lot of times at road courses we’re struggling to put power down and Barber is kind of unique in that I think this weekend, the car and the tire is going to be able to take all that the engine can give it. And that’s what we’ve been preparing to do. I think we’ll be in a pretty good place come this weekend.”
 
Q.) YOU COVER ALL THE OTHER MAJOR RACING CIRCUITS HERE IN AMERICA, WHETHER IT BE IMSA OR NHRA OR NASCAR OR WHATEVER; WHAT DO YOU SEE AS YOURBIGGEST CHALLENGES OVERALL?
 
MARK STIELOW:
“The biggest challenges that we’re working on right now is you know, folks spend a lot of time on Sports Car racing. So, the GTLM class is going to converge into GT Daytona Pro. So, we’ve been working a lot on a conversion package for that. And there has been a lot of investigation, a lot of work has been done, on our end studying the LMDh proposal. 

LMDh is very interesting to us and there’s going to be a lot of manufacturers in that space, so we’ve been heavily looking at that. So, there’s a lot of activity going on in that space. My counterpart, Eric Warren, has got all the NASCAR stuff and with all the work going into NG7 car, and with that getting ready to launch next year, there’s a lot of activity in that space also. So, there’s going to be some exciting stuff going on in motorsports in the next few years.”
 
Q.) ON THE CHEVROLET DETROIT GRAND PRIX WEEKEND, IT’S BEEN A BIG INCONVENIENCE WITH THE RE-SCHEDULING OF EVENTS THIS PAST YEAR. RECENTLY WE’VE LEARNED DETROIT WILL BE THE TRADITIONAL IMSA/INDYCAR DOUBLEHEADER AND A HOMETOWN DEBUT ON THE CORVETTE C8.R. WHAT IS THE IMPORTANCE OF THAT WEEKEND TO SHOWCASE GM RACING’S TECHNOLOGY WITH CADILLAC, CORVETTE, AND CHEVROLET?
 
MARK STIELOW:
“It’s always good to play on a home field. We’ll be racing in the shadow of the Ren Cen. In my previous jobs at GM, I’ve actually driven some of the parade cars down there. So, it’s nice to run that event and for us to do well. Unfortunately, our competitors won’t be showing up to race against the Corvettes, so we’ll be running exhibition only. There are some prior commitments that Porsche has that they can’t get out of, so we’ll be running the Corvette exhibition. And the Cadillacs will be there strong and INDYCAR also. It’s always a fun event. I’m hoping that COVID-19 turns around and we can have it be a well-attended event, but that’s still kind of up in the air right now.”
 
Q.) ONE OF THE BIG QUESTIONS WE’VE GOTTEN SINCE LAST YEAR’S INDY 500 IS WILL WE HAVE CHEVY BACK, HOPEFULLY ON EQUAL TERMS; MAKING IT A TRUE QUESTION MARK AS TO HOW THE 2021 EVEN WILL PLAY OUT. IS THERE ANYTHING YOU WERE ABLE TO TAKE FROM THE OPEN TEST HERE THAT MIGHT LEAD BOWTIE FANS TO HOPE AND BELIEVE THAT THERE COULD BE A REALLY HARD AND COMPETITIVE RUN HERE IN MAY THAT MIGHT LEAD INTO A REVERSAL OF FORTUNE FROM LAST YEAR’S EVENT?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“I think so. I always joke with our group that hope is a very bad plan. So, we’ve had to really dig deep and try to look at where we missed it last year. Collectively, our groups have never worked better together when you look across the Chevrolet performance team with Ilmor and Pratt & Miller and everyone at Chevy, and then our race teams. I can’t thank them enough for all that they’ve contributed in the off-season. And we didn’t play a blame game. We just left there frustrated with our overall performance and have done everything we could since late August there to address it for this year. I think that the cars have changed enough that it’s kind of a re-set from 2020 when you look at the new aero parts that INDYCAR is introducing there. It seemed like at the test that guys could follow closer is maybe a little easier to pass with the barge boards and some of the different floor configurations that INDYCAR has come up with. But that was a pretty favorable day. It was cool and cloudy. I’m sure if we have a 95-degree sunny race day it’s still going to be really difficult. So, we’ve put a lot of emphasis on how we are going to qualify better, how are we going to get the most out of our engine package; like I said, we’ve visited every area of performance and tried to polish on everything. Our group is very detail-oriented, so I think we’re going to have a strong package.”
 
Q.) THE END OF 2022 IS THE END OF THE CURRENT INDYCAR ENGINE REGULATIONS. YOU ARE PROBABLY WORKING RIGHT NOW ON THE NEW ENGINE CONFIGURATION. BUT FOR THIS CURRENT ENGINE, IS THERE STILL DEVELOPMENT GOING ON?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“Yeah, we’re very fortunate to have a lot of depth and talent and motivated people. So, there’s still things we can work on in the 2.2 liter. There are some areas that are always open. And we’re running 2.4 liters now. We have our first engines on the dyno. We’re very happy with where that program is at and we’re multi-tasking. It’s very busy times for the engine program. We still have to go to the track. We’ve got to race the 2.2 liter approximately 32 to 34 more times. We’re not looking to give up anything there. And then we’ve got to have a prom debut in 2023 as well. So, the engine-side of things is flat out at the moment.”
 
Q.) JOSEF NEWGARDEN WAS TALKING LAST MONTH ABOUT HOW THE COVID RESTRICTIONS HAVE REQUIRED THEM TO WORK SMARTER AND MORE EFFICIENT AND THAT THEY STRUGGLED WITH THAT LAST YEAR AND WEREN’T ABLE TO USE OPTIMIZATION ACROSS ALL THE CARS. FROM A CHEVROLET PERSPECTIVE, HOW ARE YOU APPROACHING THESE CHALLENGES?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“COVID-19 has affected motorsports and everyone in the paddock kind of the same. We don’t look at it as an excuse that we have less track time because it’s the same for all the competitors. There has been a trend in the last five years that track time is reduced and you have to roll off the trailer very, very strong. If you’re completely lost Friday morning or Saturday morning, it doesn’t make that much difference. But overall, we’re all recognizing come P1, you really need to be in the window, you need to be close; and then just polish on it. Ideally, you don’t make many changes. So, the pre-event preparation, I think, circuit by circuit, how we use our DIL simulator working with teams and drivers before we ever get to the race track; all those things were already trending in this direction, and then with the COVID-19 reductions in track time, it’s really just amplified it. I don’t think anyone would have ever thought two years ago that NASCAR would only have really four practice sessions in an entire year. So, even within NASCAR, that’s the extreme; and then specific to INDYCAR, we have a reduction but not an elimination of practice. So, we still have an opportunity to learn and improve; especially at street courses where you cannot test. But Jay Frye and his group have done a great job of putting together a pretty logical plan of street courses. They’re mostly three-day events. Road courses are two days. If you really struggle at a road course you can test there in the off-season. So, I think we’re really pleased with how INDYCAR has handled this and the direction that it’s going. For us, it just amplifies the work you do before getting to the race track really matters and needs to be correct.”
 
Q.) WHAT’S THE BREAKDOWN BETWEEN ILMOR ENGINEERING AND GM IN TERMS OF WHAT DO THEY DO AND WHAT DO YOU DO ON THE ENGINE? AND WHEN IT COMES TO THE HYBRID THAT’S COMING IN, WHO IS GOING TO DO THE HYBRID PIECE? WHO IS GOING TO INTEGRATE IT?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“Our technical group tries really hard to not operate in silos or individual company-type thinking. So, we all work for the Chevrolet program. We’re all pulling in the same direction all the time. So, we really blur those lines. A lot of times the collaboration amongst the group has been spectacular. And even breaking down, just beyond the engine program, of bringing in the race teams to these conversations and where we want things to progress over time. So, I would like to think, internally, that Ilmor and GM are all just one engine program working together to try to have the best package we can. There are certainly strengths Ilmor has that we don’t have and vide-versa. We have some analysis and tools that as General Motors and Chevrolet is very useful. And Ilmor is a very competent, excellent engine supplier in motorsports. So, I think we try to put all that together and that makes us have an overall really good engine package.”
 
Q.) HOW POSSIBLE IS IT TO TEST THE 2.4 LITER ENGINE WITHOUT THE HYBRID SYSTEM HOOKED UP? ARE YOU ABLE TO PUT A FIGURE ON HOW MUCH THE INCREASED DISPLACEMENT OF THE ENGINE AND HOW MUCH WOULD COME FROM THE HYBRID?
 
MARK STIELOW:
“On the hybrid-side we could emulate that. Before we get the hybrid unit, we can run some simulations on our dyno to simulate that. On the power-side of the equation, I’ll let Rob answer that. I haven’t really been in all the details of that yet.”
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“I think somewhat lost in the 2.4 liter transition is the fact that we’re going up in base boost as well. So, the easy thing is to think we’re going up roughly 10 percent in displacement. We’re going to go up 10 percent in power; but also, we’re going to start operating at 1.6 bars, the standard for street courses instead of 1.5 bar. And you put all that together with the hybrid unit, I think fans will be pleased with the power projections and where the engine programs are headed overall. To answer your question, we can’t run a 2.4 liter with a hybrid. Once you delete an alternator it is gone for good. So, I think all of us, INDYCAR, Honda, Chevrolet are all in for the hybrid unit to run the 2.4 liter is going to be required, not optional.”
 
Q.) THE 900 HP TARGET AT INDYCAR, WHEN DO YOU THINK WE’LL SEE THE ENGINES HITTING THAT MAGIC MARK?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“I’m not sure. I think a lot of that depends on the finalized specs of the hybrid unit, which is really INDYCAR’s area of development during this. On the engine-side, we’re just going to focus on getting all we can out of the 2.4 liter at all the various race levels of boost.”
 
Q.) IN THE PAST YOU HAVE USED THE INDYCAR ENGINE PROGRAM TO HELP DEVELOP THINGS LIKE DIRECT INJECTION TECHNOLOGY AND TO RUN ENGINEERS THROUGH. WITH THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE IN POWERING CARS, IS THAT STILL THE MAIN PURPOSE FOR BEING PART OF A SERIES LIKE INDYCAR?
 
MARK STEILOW:
“Yeah, my counterpart, Russ O’Blenes, has the propulsion-side of motorsports, and there are a lot of young engineers in that space that learned about racing and there’s also joint development work being done both at Ilmor like Rob talked about Ilmor and GM up at Pontiac for motorsports powertrain development. So, there is still a lot of technology transferred between the two. It’s still a viable training ground for us to learn more things and for us to develop people, processes, and tools to become better. General Motors and Chevrolet are still going to keep on making internal combustion engines for a while; so, we’re going to keep on pushing it as far as we can.”
 
Q.) I WON’T ASK ALL THE NAMES OF THE TEAMS AND ENTRIES YOU’LL BE ENGAGED WITH FOR THE INDY 500, BUT CAN YOU TELL US THE ANTICIPATED FINAL NUMBER OF CHEVY-POWERED ENTRIES? AND IF YOU ARE UN-SIGNING TEAMS OR IF THERE ARE STILL POSSIBILITIES FOR MORE TO BE HAD FOR THE MONTH OF MAY?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“That’s a very good question given the time of year. I think that’s the most cars last week we’ve ever run at Indy during an open test which, for our group…. It’s a difficult expansion when you go from running 10 to 11 full-time cars and then I think last week we had15 and then that’s kind of an incremental step. We expect we may add another one. We’re not completely sure. But it’s getting close to crunch time, so we’re close to finalizing. For us it’s really do we have the parts and the people to do it. And if race teams put something together, we try to be good partners with our teams; and we’ll figure out a way to make it happen.”
 
Q.) REGARDING 2023 HYBRIDIZATION AND INDYCAR, GENERAL MOTORS HAS NOT CONFIRMED ANYTHING IN REGARD TO IMSA AND LMDH, BUT BY CHANCE BOTH CLASSES WILL INDEED BE GOING HYBRID AT THE SAME TIME. AT LEAST WHILE PLANNING TO BE IN INDYCAR, CONSIDERING BEING IN IMSA, IS THERE ANYTHING YOU CAN DO AS A MANUFACTURER KNOWING THAT NASCAR IS ALSO LOOKING AT HYBRIDIZATION? WHAT DO YOU DO AND HOW DO YOU TREAT ALL THESE POSSIBILITIES FOR THE PLACES WHERE YOU ARE RACING, COULD BE RACING, SWITCHING TO THIS NEW TECHNOLOGY WITH POSSIBLY EACH ONE A BIT DIFFERENT THAN THE OTHER? DO YOU WORK WITH THESE SANCTIONING BODIES AND SAY HEY, DON’T ASK US TO BUY THREE DIFFERENT ONES OF THE SAME UNIT? HOW DO YOU TREAT WHAT COULD BE THREE VERY DIFFERENT THINGS?
 
MARK STIELOW:
“Right now, all the conversations I’ve been in and everything we’ve seen, there is very little sharing between the sanctioning bodies. So yeah, in a utopian world, it would be awesome if those guys all worked together, and we could come up with a common solution. But for a lot of reasons, everybody wants their own special mousetrap. So, what I’ve seen so far is everybody is heading down a slightly different path. But that stuff seems to be changing all the time. These meeting are constantly evolving.”
 
Q.) THERE HAS BEEN SOME TALK OR RUMORS ABOUT WHAT F-1 DOES. THEY CAPTURE MGU-H TO TAKE THE HEAT OFF THE ENGINE AND CONVERTING THAT TO ENERGY IN THE BATTERY. IS THAT ANY TALK OF DOING THAT FOR INDYCAR OR IS THAT STRICTLY A KINETIC ENERGY SYSTEM?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“Yeah, it’s been an interesting conversation with INDYCAR because we would be the first series to run a Hybrid on an oval. So, a lot of this is very conceptual. To your point, INDY qualifying engine duty cycle is ideally 100 percent if you never lift. So, how do you get any kinetic energy from that? Other times during the race, the engine duty cycle is not 100 percent when you’re in traffic. So that does open up the possibility of the car wasting some energy there. In the end it’s an energy balance equation that INDYCAR is going to need us or going to need to tell us how that want this. It also adds a layer of complexity and cost that I’m not sure is the right fit for INDYCARS. So, I think we’re leaning more toward it’s going to be a kinetic recovery system primarily.”
 
Q.) THE PUSH TO PASS WE HAVE TODAY, IS THAT COMPLETELY GOING AWAY WITH THE HYBRID? OR WILL THERE STILL BE A TURBO BOOST PUSH TO PASS IN COMBINATION WITH THE HYBRID SYSTEM?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“The nice thing is with our boosted engines is if any point during the development and first test of the hybrid unit we need more or less power, the engine programs function on electric wastegates. So, it’s relatively easy to change the boost limitations if INDYCAR desires that. I think that. If they need us to help push with a little bit more boost, I’m sure we would easily be able to do that.”
 
Q.) YOU MENTIONED EARLIER THAT YOU’VE DEVOTED A LOT OF TIME LATELY TO IMSA AND THE LMDH AND GTD-PRO. CAN YOU GIVE US AN IDEA ON WHEN GM MIGHT REACH A DECISION OR MAKE AN ANNOUNCEMENT ON FUTURE PARTICIPATION THERE?
 
MARK STIELOW:
“I would say it would be in the next 45 days.”
 
Q.) CONCERNING THE NEW ENGINE WITH THE HYBRID 2.4 LITER, CAN YOU SAY SOMETHING ABOUT THE MEASUREMENTS?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“INDYCAR and us are working around the assumption that it will be around the same size engine, physically. We’re going up in bore size but 2.4 is not a huge architecture change. Our engine is going to be all-new. I don’t know of any carryover components that we’re taking from the 2.2 liter. So, from that perspective, it’s a clean sheet design; but fitting in the same envelope, if you will.”
 
Q.) ON THE ISSUE OF COST, IF YOU HAD TO GUESS, WHAT INCREASE WOULD THERE BE TO THE TEAMS WHEN THE HYBRID SYSTEM IS IMPLEMENTED, PER SEASON?
 
ROB BUCKNER:
“That’s pretty open-ended and not really defined at the moment as the early hardware and INDYCAR is still working through what that system is going to look like. It’s really not going to be a part of our relationship with the teams, so I’m not really familiar. I know that Jay Frye and Darren Samsum are leading that program for INDYCAR and they’re very cost-conscious; and they’ve been involving the teams in these discussions. So, we think overall, the paddock will be able to make that work. But I can’t say I know any exact figures or details as of today.”
[ht: Inside Track Communications For Chevrolet]

... notes from The EDJE






TAGS: Mark Stielow, Rob Buckner, General Motors, Chevrolet, Cadillac, NTT INDYCAR SERIES, IMSA, NHRA, Hybrid 2.4 Liter. Turbo 2.2 Liter, The EDJE