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Keselowski: NASCAR's new inspection system will 'level playing field'

Leading NASCAR Cup drivers say the new 'Hawkeye' technical inspection will level the playing field in 2018.

Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, tech inspection
Brad Keselowski, Team Penske Ford rolling through inspection
Erik Jones, Furniture Row Racing Toyota goes through inspection
Ty Dillon, Germain Racing Chevrolet at the technical inspection
Brad Keselowski, Team Penske Ford, Paul Wolfe
Kyle Larson, Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Roush Fenway Racing Ford Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota Brad Keselowski, Team Penske Ford
Kurt Busch, Stewart-Haas Racing Ford
Kurt Busch, Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, Kasey Kahne, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Kurt Busch, Stewart-Haas Racing Ford
Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Jimmie Johnson
Jimmie Johnson, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

The new system, which scans the car with lasers and compares information to computer-aided drawings provided by each of NASCAR's manufacturers, was trialled at four races last year.

Now designed to find illegalities in 90 seconds using 16 cameras and eight projectors in a tent, it replaces NASCAR's old laser inspection system and the claw template station.

There were controversies over potential rulebreaking during the 2017 season, including when Dale Earnhardt Jr. accused teams of manipulating post-race burnouts to pass inspections.

How it could affect competition

Penske's Brad Keselowski has been critical of NASCAR's rules in light of Toyota's dominance but says the new change gives him hope Ford can be competitive.

"The biggest thing for me is seeing what happens with the Hawkeye system," he said. "That will be the determining factor on what manufacturer is successful this year.

"If the Hawkeye system comes in working fully I think we will see a very level playing field in 2018 and we are capable of winning.

"It is inherent to the designs of the cars that some things weren't able to be policed before that were designed into other cars that, with this system, it will eliminate it."

Taking out the human element

Fellow Ford runner Kurt Busch backed Keselowski's assessment.

"It will be taking out more of the human element now," Busch told Motorsport.com

"With the way that the LIS [laser image scanning] platform is with laser-inspection, you hope that it is the same for everybody.

"I hope it will level the playing field when it comes to tech-inspection."

Chevrolet NASCAR manager Pat Suhy said that the old system allowed teams to be creative in working around the limits.

"There's a rule that says cars have to look right but they weren't inspected efficiently so you could be quite creative with how you manipulate a design of a surface," he said.

"Knowing that there's a new inspection process, that's vision-based with camera-based system stuff, some of the things we probably would have done if it was strictly the [old] grid template system we knew were directionally incorrect."

Teams can practice with the new system ahead of the 2018 season.

Teams forced to adapt with smaller pit crews in 2018

NASCAR has also revamped its pit rules, reducing pit-road personnel from six to five.

The over-the-wall pit crew, housing "organisational" roles such as team manager, has been cut from four to three in 2018, with a fourth person allowed for teams with three cars or more.

Seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson says the move has teams scrambling to adapt.

"To have this change now, essentially somebody has to do two roles, the systems all these teams have built into place are all changing," said Johnson.

"We've [Hendrick Motorsports] been scrambling like a lot of the other teams. It's been hard because it's changing our systems dramatically."

Pitstops are expected to take longer in 2018, especially as the refueller will not be able to perform other duties during stops.

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