Weekend Herald

IndyCars get seal of approval

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Indy drivers Juan Pablo Montoya and Oriol Servia gave the new IndyCars two thumbs up this week.

They’ll find out soon enough if anyone else agrees with the early reviews.

After spending the day testing the sleek, stylish cars on Indianapol­is’ 2.5- mile oval, the two veterans left the opening day screening by insisting the cars run even better than they look.

“I think they definitely made the right move at the right time,” said Montoya, the Colombian who won the Indianapol­is 500 twice. “I think the core fans will really like the look and, again, I think the racing will be better and allow people to be a lot more aggressive.”

It’s exactly what series officials needed after spending years trying to develop a highperfor­mance aero kit that also had enough fan appeal to keep it through the 2020 season.

Drivers, engineers and fans pitched in by making suggestion­s. It now appears as if all that work is paying dividends.

When the first images of the cars were revealed this week, IndyCar president of competitio­n and operation, Jay Frye called it a “home run”. But rather than roll out the red carpet for the first test, Montoya and Servia, of Spain, strapped themselves into the cockpit and got to work.

With a smattering of fans watching between the Brickyard’s first and second turns, Montoya and Servia carefully went through the series’ checkoff list and quickly got the cars up to race speed.

Montoya wouldn’t say how fast they went, although observers clocked the cars turning laps in about 41.4 seconds or roughly 217 mph. And neither was pushing it on a sunny day with track temperatur­es around 130C.

“Everyone was trying to be safe because it’s a brand new machine,” Servia said after completing 104 laps. “We ended up, I think, with very good balance. I think it’s going to be a very good racer.”

Still, the reviews weren’t perfect. Allen Miller, Honda Performanc­e Developmen­t’s race team leader, acknowledg­ed Servia had a software glitch on his first run.

Once they found a solution, the rest of the day went off without a hitch. “Weare looking forward Juan Pablo Montoya ( left) and Oriol Servia in front of the newly designed IndyCars ( left); Montoya drives down the main strait at the Indianapol­is Motor Speedway ( above). to some straight, head- to- head engine battling,” Miller said, referring to a competitio­n Chevrolet has been winning lately.

Montoya and Servia have three more test dates — August 1 at Mid- Ohio, August 10 at Iowa and September 26 at Sebring — to work out any kinks before manufactur­ers begin testing. Teams are scheduled to receive the kits in November and will start testing in January.

The most noticeable changes are smaller wings that are placed lower on the cars; removal of the rear wheel guards; the shifting of more weight to the front of the cars and more downforce from underneath that series drivers lobbied for.

Montoya suggested that losing the rear- wheel guards has brought back a more traditiona­l openwheel flavour.

But it could help in other ways. “We never liked the rear bumpers, I’d call it, because it didn’t do what they wanted,” Servia said. “And that took away some of our visibility in the rearview mirrors.”

By moving the weight and adding more downforce from under the cars, Montoya believes drivers will run closer together and pass more often — both of which should produce even better shows. “I really do like it,” Servia said. “It’s a hot day in Indiana, we’re doing laps here, and every time I get out of the car I have a smile on my face.”

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