The Cup series director, Richard Buck, addressed questions about the problems encountered during Friday's inspection process, in which every team made it through inspection but 13 could not fix their issues in time to participate in qualifying.
Q. Richard, was there a common issue with most of the cars, or what was
the predominant problem for people being unable to get through inspection?
Buck: I think we saw different
areas where the teams were pushing the limits to get through it. We've got a
new rules package here, and obviously the history of Atlanta and the grip is so
important here, I think we've seen that with the test yesterday, teams getting
to the limits, and we were open yesterday for all day on the laser inspection
station and templates and such, and we had quite a few cars that came through.
We did see the area of the laser inspection station where teams were pushing it,
and that's their job. They're trying to get every bit that they can. We made every effort ‑‑ our goal was to make sure
everybody has a fair opportunity to get through there, so our focus was to make
sure that we ran ‑‑ were able to run every car across there at least once to
give them an opportunity, and that's what we did.
Q. Did you consider delaying the start or
increasing the length of the first round even more, and then also, there were
some people who said that you kind of stopped giving out sheets of paper as far
as go or no go, and they felt like you were kind of more lax near the end or
once kind of the qualifying session started.
Buck: Yeah, as far as the time
goes, we worked with the teams, we worked with everybody. Obviously we have
partners with television and we're time certain, but we could see the trend
starting to develop there, so our job was to try and work with the teams and
allow them to meet the parameters, the rules that we have set in place, and so
we were able to push it 15 minutes in an effort to give them as much time as we
could, in answer to that question.
In answer to your second question as far as
slacking off at all on that, we don't do that. We treat everybody the same.
There was cars that came through there two and even a couple cars that came
through three times, effort. Everybody got a fair shot at coming through there
in a timely manner, and then obviously at the end, we saw the time frame and we
were hustling and pushing. I was pushing all of our officials, but that pushing
on the officials was ‑‑ is pushing to physically keep the same accuracy when it
was a mechanical job, but the laser itself, it's automated, so there's no ‑‑
there was no difference from the first cars that went through there to the last
ones.
Q. What's the solution here, because obviously
it's not something that you want or the teams want to have a situation like
this. Is it all on the teams to just have their stuff together the first time
they come through?
Buck: That's a good
question, and that's where we work with the teams on a daily basis. We'll look
at the process and try to understand it. We put more cars through there today
than normal, and in a timely fashion. Last year about four races into it, we
were putting a lot of pressure on the crew chiefs, we had a lot of work for them
to get ‑‑ it was new. We had the ride height rules, and we could see that
process was strained, if you will, so we worked with the teams to adjust that,
and we actually last year about, I think it was the third or fourth race in, we
were able to work with our tracks and our partners and be able to extend that
inspection time to allow them more time to get through there.
But it's tough. The teams have to hustle, the
crew chiefs will tell you, they've got a brand new package here with new
downforce and new driver combinations and new teams, and to put it all on them,
the first one, it was a tough one. We'll look at it as we always do with a fine
microscope and get input from the teams, and then if down the road, if we can
and see the need, we'll make an adjustment.
Q. Can you explain the process of determining the order for inspection for
everybody, because I know there's been a lot of questions about how do you
decide who went first, who goes last?
Buck: There's a couple of
key things that we look at, and it's how to be as fair as we can through the
inspection process. That trickles down, as well. It's a random draw. It's
random, and that is your order on pit road for qualifying, your pit stall, and
it also is your order for inspection. At 55 minutes after the final practice before
qualifying, we put on the crew chiefs a tremendous load to put their setups on
and be in line, but we stop the work for everybody. It doesn't matter if you're
last in line or first in line, at 55 minutes, to be fair to everybody, all work
stops on the cars, we push them to the back of the garage, and inspection
starts. They may sit there for a while but they're not having that opportunity
to continue to work on the car which makes it unfair. That's how the process
works.
We have each station that's timed. It's about
two and a half minutes per station, and we try to manage that dynamic, and if a
car comes through there, the incentive today, unlike years ago where you could
cut the line and keep the incentive, today it's to come through right because
everybody gets one opportunity to come through the entire inspection process,
and their job is to be right, and if they're not right at that inspection
station, that's when they go in a holding pen if you will or a holding pattern
and have to stay there until everybody else has the opportunity to come through
to be fair to everybody. Once that's through, then we allow them in the order
that they were received to begin with, that's the order that they go back
through inspection.
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