|
Orleans Racing Wraps Daytona Test
Las Vegas, NC
(Jan 17, 2006) The Orleans Racing team headed to last
weeks Daytona test with a punch list of tests to be performed
--- and at the end of the three-day session most items had a check
mark next to them.
The three-day
test at the self proclaimed World Center of Racing gave
crew chief, Tony Rambo Liberati plenty of data to draw
from. The goal is to incorporate all of the good and
be ready for the February 17th Dodge Dealers 200 Craftsman Truck
Series event.
The test was
a good workout for the Orleans Racing team giving the road crew
plenty of opportunity to gel for the 2006 season. The going is slow
and arduous, but at the end of the session Rambo had the #77 Dodge
running competitive laps.
The team
as a whole did very respectable for what we were looking for,
said driver, Brendan Gaughan following the test. No, we never
threw down lap times that we wanted. No, we were never wicked, bad-ass
fast or anything like that. We had to go in and take the steps and
do what we needed to do to learn what we need when we come back
with the correct aero package.
Explaining how
the test proceeded for him Gaughan offered, We took the tape
and put tape on it and tried umpteen different tape configurations.
We tried the shocks in all the different locations for the shocks.
We were able to do the testing that we needed to do to get the information
for when we come back for the race. Now we know that tape configuration
A did not cool as well as B but was faster. OK, thats for
qualifying then.
Summing up the
results the Las Vegas native said, Rambo already said were
going to cut off the bodies and relocate them. Were going
to come back with Kevin Kroyer and after another month of R&D
well come back with a better motor. Well be able to
come back and be ready for anything.
The downside
to the tests? Frankly theyre pretty boring for the driver.
Youve
heard it from the late Dale Earnhardt all the way to the 18 year
olds. Doing the Daytona and Talladega style tests is just mundane,
says Gaughan. You have to sit in that line on pit road for
20 minutes to be able to go out. Youre just sitting there
and you fall asleep in the race car because its just a mini
bake oven.
It does
get difficult but thats where working with Buddy Baker in
2004 helped me, Gaughan adds. You have to be able to
do the same thing for the data every time to make the test legit.
You have to run the same line, same line, same line for all three
laps of a run. If you dont, all that mundane-ness becomes
useless. So if youre going to have to sit there and do it,
at least do what you need to do to do it right. Dont think
it doesnt matter. It does. And it makes big differences.
Fortunately
Buddy Baker taught me that and were able to kind of catch
on to that whole program. But, man A-B-A is just a miserable time
when the crew chief wants to make a three inch hole and then tape
the three inch hole and then un-tape the three inch hole. Youre
like, Ive got to do it again? Can I take a stick and
poke the tape out or something? It does become very difficult.
With the test
complete trucks No. 16 and 17 have a date with the Saws-All, after
which Orleans Racings in-house body men will re-skin both
speedway Dodges for February. The clock is ticking given that both
trucks need to be in Detroit for wind tunnel testing on February
4th. Theres no doubt the timing will be tight, but with a
few late nights the boys in the fab shop should be able to get everything
done in time.
I know
the boys back at the shop have a lot of work to do, but theyll
get it done, said Gaughan. Theyre driven --- and
with the help of Rambo and our new shop foreman, Tom Buzze theyll
succeed.
Ive
got the best group of guys Ive ever had with me, concludes
Gaughan. They want to win as much as I do. That gives me a
great deal of comfort. You dont have to tell them what to
do they know. We just give them the tools to do their job
and stand back. If they need help weve got two of the best
right there to offer guidance.
|