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Every year, the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway somehow finds a new way to exhaust everyone involved. And that is exactly what makes it one of NASCAR’s toughest races. There is, of course, the 600 miles aspect, but the way the race keeps piling challenge after challenge onto drivers and teams as the night progresses is what few people understand.

Now, the former Hendrick Motorsports crew chief, who called races for Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. across some of their most successful seasons, has offered a candid breakdown of what makes Charlotte so uniquely punishing, particularly for the Next Gen car, even as the same model remains one of the best aerodynamic fits for the speedway.

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NASCAR insider explains Charlotte’s challenges

“Well, first of all, this car is really built for these high-speed intermediate tracks: the mile-and-a-half and the two miles. But Charlotte, remember, is a little smaller than Michigan; it’s about the same size as Kansas, but it has a little more grip.”

Charlotte’s surface and the width of the track mostly allow close racing. And considering how aero-sensitive the Next Gen cars are, it becomes difficult to keep up the pace in dirty air. This, paired with the rough asphalt, makes the cars difficult to handle on multiple parts of the track.

Ross Chastainhad famously noted last year: “When you run the top of the track up by the wall, it’s almost like a washboard – if you’ve driven on a dirt road that’s rough and it’s really bouncing really aggressively – that’s what Turn 1 up by the wall feels like.”

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