High-Tech Research and Design Lab Revs Up NASCAR Team's Engines

 

 

 

 

WELCOME, N.C. October 13, 2000—Every NASCAR racing team lives to win. But as the operations staff at Richard Childress Racing (RCR) will tell you, the race begins long before the weekend event.

From the time the checkered flag is waved until the next race, RCR engineers and researchers are not only racing against time, they're competing to find the best technologies that will gain their four drivers including seven-time NASCAR Winston Cup champion Dale Earnhardt the next win.

"What we do Monday through Friday really determines what happens over the weekend on the track," says Lenny Batycki, vice president of operations at RCR. "We have to know far ahead how our engines are going to perform."

Performance is the RCR Research and Design Lab's business. A wonderland of technology, the shop is where some of the best-kept secrets in racing reside. State-of-the-art CAD/CAM software, giant CNC and CMM machines, and Raindrop Geomagic digital duplication software are among the many weapons the staff uses to gain that extra thrust of horsepower for the next race.

The Competitive Difference
Inside the squeaky-clean lab, the Chevrolet Monte Carlo race car engines are built from the ground up. After each race, they must be taken apart, inspected and rebuilt again. Many of the parts come from Chevrolet. Others are built in the lab. All are retooled to give the cars maximum performance within the confines of NASCAR regulations. Engines are tested with dynamometers that run an engine full throttle to ensure that it will withstand a five-hour, pedal-to-the-metal race.

"The skills we have in this shop have an awful lot to do with what the outcome will be," Batycki says.

RCR engineers are intensely trained to deal with some of the most powerful engines in the automotive industry. The V-8 Winston Cup engine runs at about 750 horsepower, with speeds as high as 200 mph. It has a 12.5:1 compression ratio with a maximum 358 cubic inches. A Busch series engine runs at about 500 horsepower with a 9.5:1 compression ratio and a maximum of 358 cubic inches. But it's what goes on inside the lab that makes each race car engine unique.



The Heartbeat of The Engine
There are many tricks of the trade that will make a race car engine gain more horsepower. But perhaps one of the most difficult, and most secretive, is cylinder head porting.

"The cylinder head port is the heartbeat of the engine," says Greg Jones, design engineer at RCR. "It is pivotal to the success of the car. Except for the cam shaft, cylinder head porting is the most guarded secret in an engine department."

Cylinder head ports allow air and fuel to travel through the cylinders. The more cylinders there are in a car, the more power it has. Cylinder head porting is when engineers reshape the ports to improve efficiency by removing flaws that come from the factory. It also reduces restrictions in the engine's intake and exhaust tracts, allowing more air and fuel into the cylinders, thus increasing horsepower.

The cylinder head porting process is so intricate and complex that it takes a true craftsman with a lot of patience to get it right. In NASCAR, teams use different cylinder heads for different racetracks. Some tracks are faster than others, some are longer. Some tracks fall under NASCAR's restrictor plate rule, which makes the cylinder head ports even more important for increased horsepower.

"We've gone through six cylinder head designs in six months," Jones says. "We are constantly searching for better performance."