I don't like to see anyone crash on any race track. There are to many dollars invested . I don't like restrictor plates either but the horse power those cars make these days , they had to do something. Bill Elliot set the NASCAR record at 212.8xx MPH back in 1985.
They would be hitting 250 MPH or more by now without the plates. As seen in this race , when they are stacked up like that at speed , all it takes is a small nudge when someone gets loose and there they go.
Couldn't agree more papa! I actually wish they would go back to factory bodies and shop built engines with a claimer price on the engine as well as the total car. Standing the windshields back up like they should be and opening up the inside of the cars so the guy in back can see through the car in front of him would be a good start, and most of these 'big ones' could be eliminated.
Would it slow them down to not needing the stupid restrictor plates ... of course it would. So what, that's why they use the plates. So have them run stock bodied cars that us hard core folks could call 'STOCK CARS' that the drivers can see through, let them run as fast as they can with the stock bodies and spec tires, or as fast as the drivers will run, and the whole series could save many millions of dollars. And any real race fan would just as likely enjoy a 500 mile race with all 36+ cars running fairly equally at say 160-180 mph rather than a handful of the big money guys running at 190+ every week in and week out, then another 12-15 cars running at 180+ in a pack, then the also rans at 170 and less bringing up the rear ... week after week.
As NASCAR stands now, it's no longer a real race but more a commercial venture with the speed simply being a matter of dollars. Speed has always been a matter of money, but it can be made a more level playing field and less costly all around with no noticeable decrease in the watching enjoyment. "Claiming" engines and/or cars will put a stop to cheating on money spent as long as the limiting values are reasonable and spec parts apply to everyone total. No one will continue to build illegal cars when as soon as they win they'll lose the car to a claimer.
Back many years ago when I was running some late models and limited late models, a competitive car could be built for the short tracks in the south east for $12-20 thousand dollars total. Today you can't even build a short track motor for $25+. Then you still have the car to build, the suspension systems, tires, fuel, practice times on various tracks, pit crew, travel, and on and on and on. A really competitive late model today can spend in excess of 1 1/2 million dollars for a year of racing and come out on the other end with far less in his pocket than when he started.
Didn't mean to get on my soap box, but the very reason my racing ended was simply cost. And trust me when I say you can't make it up with volume. Two wrecked cars cost twice as much as one wrecked car!!!