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A
New Race Car Combines the
Best Ideas with the Latest Technology
(ARA)
Exactly how many people does it take
to design a new car for NASCAR racing? As far as Fords new
Taurus is concerned, the answer is many.
And they all
need to be on the same page.
When the 2004
Taurus made its debut at Daytona, it represented Fords most
synergistic effort in race car design to date. This synergy comes
from all corners of the Ford empire and includes solid representation
from not only the NASCAR ranks but also the real world production
side.
The prior
version of Taurus, originally presented to the public in the 1998
Daytona 500, has provided excellent results. But its humble beginnings
came after public, and, at times, cantankerous battles between
various team entities that wanted to leave their mark on that
specific iteration.
A lot
of times you can build a car that just suits one teams purpose,
said Ford Racings NASCAR Field Manager Robin Pemberton,
on a pitfall of this type of engineering exercise. Pemberton is
in a position to know, as he was one of the principals of a three-team
entity that worked on the 98 Taurus while working at Penske
South Racing.
I think
the last couple times we had Penske doing one version, Yates doing
one and Roush doing one, recalled Pemberton shaking his
head. During that (98) project, NASCAR would cut templates
off of cars and they were different cars that were constructed
in different ways and not all the templates fit all the cars at
the same time.
It was
almost impossible.
With lessons
learned from 1998, Ford Racings Greg Specht knew that he
wanted to approach the car design issue differently. With a heftier
engineering staff at his disposal, all he needed was word that
the production staff wanted a new car developed for the NASCAR
circuit.
The call for
a new Taurus came approximately 20 months prior to its first on-track
experience and included conversations between Ford Racing and
Ford production. The result is a race car that is representative
of what consumers see on the showroom floor.
What
we have in 04 is a re-freshening of the Taurus, so that
kicks off a process, recalled Specht. After the decision
was made, we say to the production guys, OK, what are your
thoughts? Show us your sketches and drawings, and so on
and so forth.
With
their ideas and goals in place, we went back and started looking
at the race car and say, OK, now what do we need to do to
the race car to have it look like the production car?
Having the
production car designers more intimately involved from the start
is also something new to the process, as the value of the NASCAR
fan base becomes a key factor.
In the
recent past, racing considerations havent influenced their
(productions) thinking a lot anyway, explained Specht.
Even going back to the Thunderbird, what they did in the
design studio was not affected that much by what was happening
on the race track. However, it is starting to change in that theyre
asking for [Ford Racings] input a lot earlier on in the
process and some ideas that will actually improve the production
car and truck.
That
happened with the new F-150, in fact, because since aero was such
a big thing on the race track, we spent a lot more time in the
wind tunnel with our race trucks than the production engineers
do with the production truck, continued Specht. So
we know a lot more about balance and downforce and drag and the
subtle little things that you can do to increase those characteristics.
Once the basic
design concepts were developed, then the aero process began. This
is the playground of Ford Racings lead aerodynamicist, Bernie
Marcus, who spent a considerable amount of time working out the
nuances of the new car by using hand sketches and computer modeling
before any consideration was given to forming actual metal fenders,
hoods and decklids.
Marcus didnt
have a wide-open field in which to draw from because of NASCARs
aero-matching rules, but he closed in on the starting
point for the new car by using electronic models and 40-percent
clay models.
I think
the reason everything went so well is because we also included
NASCAR early on and that was very different from the past,
Specht offered. The previous programs that Ive been
involved in, wed go off in the corner and do our jobs. The
day it was due, we handed it to NASCAR and said, OK, heres
our car. Can we have your approval for this?
We took
a very different approach this time around, and before we started
fabricating the car and after we went to the teams and had an
idea of what we wanted to do. We brought NASCAR up to Dearborn
to our design studio and met with our production car designers
and walked NASCAR through. Heres the production car.
Heres what were thinking of doing with the race car
to match the production car. What do you think?
This approach
resulted in success. The very first time the 2004 Taurus competed
in a NASCAR race, Dale Jarrett drove one to victory in the Budweiser
Shootout at Daytona International Speedway in early February.
The
piece that were ending up with is a very good race car,
said Specht, and it goes to show that two heads are better
than one.
For more information,
visit www.fordracing.com.
Source:
ARA Content
Other
Web Sites of Interest:
NASCAR
Daytona
International Speedway
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