No that was NASCAR
The Nascar Cup Series fields 43 drivers at every race they go to on the schedule.
Bootleggers were basically moonshine runners. Those that did this started racing their cars against each other, thus NASCAR was unofficially created.
After Prohibition was repealed in 1933, moonshiners, who had modified their street cars to escape from federal officials, decided to race these cars against each other on dirt tracks as entertainment. By this time, Daytona Beach was a sight for land speed records. Bill France Sr. brought the stock cars to the beach and in 1948 formed an organized racing series called NASCAR.
43 cars race in each Nascar Sprint Cup race. The numbers change on how many enter.
43 drivers are in one Nascar Sprint Cup Series race.
in Nascar it is 43 world of outlaws sprint cars is 24 and any other unknown race track has as many cars that enter the race in each class
Because NASCAR mandates the number of cars in each division...just like everything else. Mostly because the way tracks were built, namely pit roads and track sizes; along with the experience level of each division. 43 is the top number, that is the "Sprint Cup" division, the top level of experience.
Through race #20, Kevin Harvick's Chevrolet Impala and Kyle Busch's Toyota Camry are tied with three wins each in the Nascar Cup Series.
Because the cars would hit each other going through the middle, and people would get hurt. That really is a stupid question.
No Each radio has a specific brand and model
In the Nascar Sprint Cup Series, there are three car manufacturers. They all don't drive the same model.These are the makes and models the drivers will use in the series:Chevrolet SSFord FusionToyota Camry