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Things to do at a NASCAR race
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<blockquote data-quote="Theron" data-source="post: 3521049" data-attributes="member: 2326"><p>I've never been to an F1 race, but I've been to a number of CART events back in the day and some sports car/endurance stuff. And one NASCAR race at Texas. I do follow just about any form of racing that involves asphalt and turning corners, so I do know a thing or two about the series.</p><p></p><p>I'd avoid the t-shirt statements. Other than that, take in the event. The one thing that a race at a track like Pocono affords you is a view of all the action, all the time. As ovals go, Pocono is almost a road course, being long and triangular with three very distinct corners (#1 is a fairly tight and slightly banked at the end of a long straight, #2 is a flat-out little thing where a lot of bouncing and rubbing takes place, and #3 is a long, flat sweeper that empties out back on the main straight.)</p><p></p><p>Buy a program and take in the atmosphere. Of all the races I've attended, I wouldn't say the NASCAR one was my favorite, but being part of that huge crowd was amazing. Tour the fan zone and take a look at the static displays and the cutaway cars. Considering the "low-tech" restrictions on Cup cars, there's still a lot of interesting engineering going into them. As an F1 fan, root for Juan Pablo.</p><p></p><p>In short, have fun. It ain't Monte Carlo, but there will be a lot more passing. <img src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f61b.png" class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" width="64" height="64" alt=":p" title="Stick out tongue :p" data-smilie="7"data-shortname=":p" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Theron, post: 3521049, member: 2326"] I've never been to an F1 race, but I've been to a number of CART events back in the day and some sports car/endurance stuff. And one NASCAR race at Texas. I do follow just about any form of racing that involves asphalt and turning corners, so I do know a thing or two about the series. I'd avoid the t-shirt statements. Other than that, take in the event. The one thing that a race at a track like Pocono affords you is a view of all the action, all the time. As ovals go, Pocono is almost a road course, being long and triangular with three very distinct corners (#1 is a fairly tight and slightly banked at the end of a long straight, #2 is a flat-out little thing where a lot of bouncing and rubbing takes place, and #3 is a long, flat sweeper that empties out back on the main straight.) Buy a program and take in the atmosphere. Of all the races I've attended, I wouldn't say the NASCAR one was my favorite, but being part of that huge crowd was amazing. Tour the fan zone and take a look at the static displays and the cutaway cars. Considering the "low-tech" restrictions on Cup cars, there's still a lot of interesting engineering going into them. As an F1 fan, root for Juan Pablo. In short, have fun. It ain't Monte Carlo, but there will be a lot more passing. :p [/QUOTE]
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