Home US SportsNASCAR What is causing all of these cool suit failures in NASCAR?

What is causing all of these cool suit failures in NASCAR?

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What is causing all of these cool suit failures in NASCAR?

There were a handful of cool suit system failures in the NASCAR Cup race at the Circuit of the Americas and while many might want to place the blame on faulty hardware the root cause is actually a bit more complex and often due to team choices for performance.

A cool suit system typically consists of a small box that is a miniaturized air conditioning unit which has an input and output for a hose that runs over the chiller. Those hoses are connected to hoses which are coiled on a shirt that the driver wears under their firesuit. When the system is functioning correctly fluid circulates through the cool suit unit and is chilled before getting to the hoses on the shirt. The ambient heat in the car and the body heat of the driver will warm the liquid as it moves through the coils in the shirt but it will still cool the driver down and be chilled again once it circulates back through the unit.

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What happens when it fails, and what causes it?

If a cool suit system fails, it will often result in the chiller part of the unit stopping to function and at that point the liquid will just continue to increase in temperature. At that point, drivers are typically in a worse situation than not wearing one of the shirts at all because they now have hot liquid layered under their firesuit that can no longer be chilled. This will often overheat drivers and cause them to need assistance like we saw with AJ Allmendinger this weekend.

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On top of the air flow demands, teams also want to control voltage to any accessory that they can because every bit of power used to power electronics is power taken away from the engine and additional fuel that is burned. For that reason, the cool suit units will often receive the bare minimum of power or be turned on and off depending on the strategy for the team which can also result in failures. Once a cool unit fails, the only realistic recourse that a driver has is to drain the shirt part of it and try to at least get rid of the hot fluid but even that typically requires a long pit stop to get an adapter that can be inserted to drain it. Since there were not a lot of incidents at COTA and with the fuel strategy being pretty aggressive, drivers didn’t really have time to stop and drain their shirt so many had to ride around with hot liquid sitting on their chest.

Shane van Gisbergen wearing cool suit

Shane van Gisbergen wearing cool suit

Shane van Gisbergen wearing cool suit

NASCAR has added some rules in order to push teams in the right direction by requiring that inlet and outlet hoses for cooling system be routed in such a way that they’re optimized for driver cooling and not for aerodynamic advantages along with requiring teams to submit drawings of how they route hoses but teams always find methods to optimize every component in the car.

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