NASCAR’s R&D Center in Concord helps the sport to be faster and safer.
CONCORD, N.C. β Dale Earnhardtβs death at the Daytona 500 in 2001 sparked a sweeping transformation in NASCAR safety.
From the introduction of energyβabsorbing SAFER Barriers at every oval track, to the nowβmandatory Head and Neck Supportβbetter known as the HANS deviceβthe sportβs approach to safety changed completely after February 18, 2001.
Current NASCAR VP of Safety Engineering John Patalak was a college student at the time.
βI was a fan of the sport, watching the race,β he said. βI was just shocked to find out Dale Earnhardt died that day.β
Today, Patalak works out of NASCARβs Research and Development Center in Concordβan entire facility born out of the urgent need to prevent another tragedy.
βThe work weβre doing now, weβre standing on the shoulders of those that came before us,β he said.
The center was built in the aftermath of Earnhardtβs tragic death to ensure the sport would never again suffer another fatality.
In 2001, Earnhardt was the fourth NASCAR driver in less than a year to perish in a race. Thanks to massive safety measures, the sportβs top series hasnβt lost a driver since, despite horrifying crashes like Ryan Newmanβs in 2020.
He walked out of the hospital just days later.
βSometimes itβs lost on folks watching on TV how dangerous what the drivers are doing,β he said, βhow dangerous it actually is. Thatβs not lost on us.β
Over the last 25 years, enormous improvements have been made here to driver seating and restraint systems, including seven and nine-point seatbelt systems.
Every racecar also contains a black box to give NASCAR information from every single crash.
βWhen thereβs a crash, we can download the information and do an accident reconstruction,β Patalak said.
That information lets NASCAR make safety changes not just in the offseasonβbut sometimes within days.
βSometimes, depending on what happens on a Sunday, our Monday looks much different,β Patalak said. βSometimes we have to respond if we see something that happens on the racetrack.β
That brought about something new this season, an intrusion panel placed between the engine and the driver to protect their feet from dangerous debris.
βThatβs now required on every race car this season,β Patalak said. βWe look at every crash, every scenario, review it, and see an opportunity that we could have done a little bit better in that situation, and we go and make those improvements.β
NASCAR is a sport built on the constant pursuit of speedβbut the R&D Centerβs mission is to ensure that safety comes with it.
βThereβs a weight of responsibility there,β Patalak said. βWe do the best we can with engineering and science, but we still pray before every race. Thereβs still that element of danger, thereβs still a risk to the driver.β
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