Bosch spark plugs power Hamlin to win

April 27, 2012

Denny Hamlin, driving a Toyota Camry powered by Bosch spark plugs for Joe Gibbs Racing, beat Martin Truex Jr. and Jimmie Johnson to the finish line in the STP 400 at Kansas Speedway Sunday, April 23. Hamlin passed Truex to take the race lead 30 laps from the finish, and grabbed the checkered flag with championship crew chief Darian Grubb commanding his pit.

Hamlin and other top-ten finishers Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kasey Kahne and Kyle Busch all ran with Bosch spark plugs, as well as Bosch fuel injectors, oxygen sensors, fuel pumps, coils, alternators and starters. Race-proven Bosch spark plugs fired flawlessly 25 million times for the five top-ten finishers during the Kansas race.

It was Hamlin's ‘day in the sun’ – after a late round of green-flag pit stops, the sun broke through the clouds for the first time all afternoon and changed the track conditions. Truex had led 173 laps, but the changing conditions allowed Hamlin to pass Truex for the lead on Lap 237, and hold him off for the final 30 laps with Johnson pursuing from the third position. This win gives Hamlin his second victory of the season, his first at the 1.5-mile Kansas track and the 19th of his career. The victory was the 199th for cars bearing the No. 11, breaking a tie for the all-time lead with the No. 43, made famous by Richard Petty, who drove to 192 of his record 200 wins with that car number. To Hamlin, the sunlight was a welcome game-changer. "Whether it was coincidence or not, our car definitely seemed like ... it was better once the sun came out," Hamlin said.

Bosch Components Important in NASCAR Fuel Injection  “Bosch components play a key role this season in the transition to electronic fuel injection in all NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race cars. Fuel injection is a logical progression for NASCAR, and an onboard computer controls fuel injectors in all race car engines, using input from two Bosch wide-band oxygen sensors in the exhaust to determine the right amount of fuel to add to the airflow just as it’s entering the cylinder,” said Wolfgang Hustedt, Bosch Motorsports Manager, North America.
 
“Bosch Oxygen Sensors are an exclusive NASCAR Performance product, and Bosch oxygen sensors, with their long history of superior performance under the most severe conditions, are the recognized standard throughout the racing world,” added Hustedt. “NASCAR race cars go through many different operating conditions at every race, and oxygen sensors are an important component of the fuel injection system,” he said.

In addition to NASCAR, cars in Grand Am and American Le Mans Series (ALMS) road races, and Chevrolet V-6 IndyCar racers run Bosch oxygen sensors as part of their EFI engine management systems.

Bosch pioneered electronic fuel injection back in the 1970’s, developing the automotive oxygen sensor as part of the total system. Today’s wide-band oxygen sensors, like those supplied to NASCAR, monitor the level of oxygen in the exhaust in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race cars, and signal the car’s engine management computer whether the engine is running ‘rich’ or ‘lean’ or right on target.