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"BRAKE" THROUGH
PERFORMANCE FOR TEAM DUPONT AT RICHMOND? |
RICHMOND, Va. (April 29, 2008) -
Richmond International Raceway, site
of this Saturday night's Crown Royal Presents the Dan Lowry 400, has always been
one of Jeff Gordon's favorite tracks. But he has not won on the three-quarter
mile layout since 2000 and "only" has two wins here. Could the driver of the No.
24 DuPont Chevrolet Impala SS capture a "brake" through victory this weekend?
Along with two victories, Gordon has collected five
poles, 12 top-fives and 18 top-10's in 30 starts. But Team DuPont suffered
through a difficult stretch during the 2005 and
2006 seasons at the Virginia
track, posting four finishes of 30th or worse and failing to lead a lap during
the four events. The "brakes" were not going his way.
"We've improved aerodynamics, horsepower and grip over
the past few years that we're going so much faster," Gordon said. "Maintaining
that speed, more so with me than other drivers, caused us to have brake issues.
"But it wasn't running out of brakes, it was building up pad on the rotor that
caused a vibration. Once that happened, the handling of the car was gone the
rest of the night.
"We addressed that, made adjustments and had two
top-five finishes last year.
Hopefully, we can build
on that and improve our finishing position this weekend."
During the 2007 events, the brake adjustments made by
the No. 24 team coincided with the introduction of the "Car of Tomorrow" (CoT)
at the short track - and the results improved. Gordon won the pole for the
spring event and led a race-high 114 laps before finishing fourth. In the
September race, he qualified second and led a race-high 191 laps en route to
another fourth-place finish.
Crew chief Steve Letarte believes their recent
turnaround is two-fold.
"The spring race was the first time we raced the
Chevrolet Impala SS here, and the Hendrick Motorsports CoT test program put us
in a good position prior to that race," Letarte said. "And when you don't run
well at a certain track, you put a little extra emphasis on turning things
around. That showed in the results.
"I think another breakthrough was the braking package
we used. In 2005 and 2006, we used what we thought was the best braking system.
But it wasn't the best system for our driver.
"Last year, we changed that package and it worked
better for Jeff. It's not the 'best,' but sometimes what works for us is not the
best on paper."
With the right "brakes," Team DuPont could be
celebrating their first win of 2008.
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