Monkeywrench
Jedi Trainee
Offline
I love how people discount technology in Nascar.. it's even funnier when it comes from British car owners :wink: . This article puts some things into perspective
https://www.epi-eng.com/piston_engine_technology/comparison_of_cup_to_f1.htm
As far as drivers go, on average yeah, the F1 driver is better than a Nascar driver. But the top Nascar guys, I think have every bit of talent as the F1 guys. Their talent has been refined on ovals vs road courses, but it's still there.
As for guts, I'm going with Nascar..
Most of the Nascar guys cut their teeth in sprint cars which have relatively equal power/weight of an F1 car, but they're on dirt, no runoff, and are in tight packs. Charging into a corner at 180mph (talking about tracks like Dover, Atlanta, Texas, etc), with nothing but a concrete wall at the edge takes guts (then do it 2-3 wide). With the exception of Spa, every F1 track looks like a paper clip when viewed from above with vast runoff areas.
Refinement.
40 car fields seperated by .1-.3 of a second. F1 level budgets, and talent (a lot of former F1 engineers in the Nascar circles), and stable rules means all their money is going into refinement. F1 sees new chassis designs every year, and the field isn't separated by much more.
I'm not a Nascar fan by any means, but I can respect it.
https://www.epi-eng.com/piston_engine_technology/comparison_of_cup_to_f1.htm
As far as drivers go, on average yeah, the F1 driver is better than a Nascar driver. But the top Nascar guys, I think have every bit of talent as the F1 guys. Their talent has been refined on ovals vs road courses, but it's still there.
As for guts, I'm going with Nascar..
Most of the Nascar guys cut their teeth in sprint cars which have relatively equal power/weight of an F1 car, but they're on dirt, no runoff, and are in tight packs. Charging into a corner at 180mph (talking about tracks like Dover, Atlanta, Texas, etc), with nothing but a concrete wall at the edge takes guts (then do it 2-3 wide). With the exception of Spa, every F1 track looks like a paper clip when viewed from above with vast runoff areas.
Refinement.
40 car fields seperated by .1-.3 of a second. F1 level budgets, and talent (a lot of former F1 engineers in the Nascar circles), and stable rules means all their money is going into refinement. F1 sees new chassis designs every year, and the field isn't separated by much more.
I'm not a Nascar fan by any means, but I can respect it.