It’s Carb Day at IMS!

Posted in Indianapolis 500 on May 22, 2026 by Oilpressure


Greetings from a surprisingly dry Indianapolis Motor Speedway! We arrived about fifteen minutes before the practice ended, due to getting caught behind a wreck in downtown Louisville.

Josef Newgarden led the Carb Day practice with a speed of 228.342 mph. ECR’s Christian Rasmussen was the second quick with a speed of 227.474 mph. David Malukas, Conor Daly and Takuma Sato rounded out the Top Five.

The three cars involved in Monday’s crash had mixed results. Romain Grosjean was eleventh quick in his repaired primary car, but Pato O’Ward and Alexander Rossi dod not fare as well in their primary cars. O’Ward was twentieth quick at 224.202 mph, and Rossi was thirty-first on the speed charts at 222.291 mph. The only two drivers slower than Rossi were Sting Ray Robb and Katherine Legge.

I said it was surprisingly dry, because it poured on us constantly from the time we left Nashville to just north of Columbus, IN. The rain was coming straight out of the south, so it will most likely catch up to us later today. Once it gets here, I think it is here to stay for the day.

The Weiner 500 will run regardless of weather, at 2:00 on FOX. But the Pit Stop Competition will probably not run in the rain.

The place was packed and getting rowdy as the concert-goers have already made their presence known. I would be lying if I said that CarB Day was my favorite day of the month. We almost totally missed the best part – the practice. The Weiner 500 was funnier than I was expecting last year, and Susan is really looking forward to Version Two this afternoon. Hopefully the rain will hold off until all scheduled track activities are completed.

We are meeting our friend Paul Dalbey and his son at Dawson’s for a very early dinner, then will go check into our hotel and call it an early night. We have early reservations for the IMS Museum tomorrow morning, then breakfast at Charlie Brown’s in Speedway. Dinner tomorrow night will be at The Coachman in Plainfield – a place we discovered about five years ago and added it to our rotation. Then it will be an early night before the race.

Please check back here tomorrow and through the weekend for updates.

George Phillips

Indianapolis 500 Preview

Posted in Indianapolis 500 on May 22, 2026 by Oilpressure


First of all, I want to express my shock and condolences to the family and friends of NASCAR two-time champion driver Kyle Busch, who passed away unexpectedly yesterday at the age of 41. We learned Thursday morning that he had been hospitalized for a severe illness, and would not race in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600. But I don’t think anyone had any idea it was this serious. Please keep his family in your prayers.

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Myth Busting at IMS

Posted in Indianapolis 500 on May 21, 2026 by Oilpressure


By Paul Dalbey

Note from George:  Today we welcome an old friend back to this page, to delve into an interesting topic. There is one disclaimer; I don’t necessarily agree with Paul on  couple of these. But the good thing is, I don’t have to agree with him. In fact, disagreeing makes for more interesting dialogue. I appreciate the time and effort Paul put into this. Readers should also be appreciative that they are not being subjected to another video appearance by the both of us. Come back tomorrow for my Indianapolis 500 Preview. – GP

There is a reason the Indianapolis 500 is the Greatest Spectacle in Racing. There is a reason why 300,000 people will stand shoulder-to-shoulder this weekend at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and remember the legacy and the stories of the 109 previous runnings of the Great Race. There is a reason why tickets, traditions, and tales are passed, literally, from generation to generation of family who trace their lineage amongst IMS history back to the very roots of the race in 1911. It’s because the history of the race is celebrated each and every year, woven into the very fabric that makes the event what it is. It isn’t a new race, or a “new tradition” (a term I completely despise), but this weekend’s race stands on the shoulders of the races that have come before it, the men and women who have given their last out of blood and sweat, bones and dollars to win this specific race.

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We Have a Winner!

Posted in IndyCar on May 20, 2026 by Oilpressure


Congratulations to Rick Johnson, of Washing state, for winning the 2026 Oilpressure.com Indianapolis Trivia Contest again. I did not think this was the toughest one over the past 17 years, but I was told be several at IMS last week that it ay have been the toughest. Rick missed only three questions this year. He gets upset with himself when he misses one, but missing tyhree was a very good effort. I realized I had one question in there twice. Fortunately most everyone got it both times.

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Second Chances Are Not for Everyone

Posted in IndyCar on May 19, 2026 by Oilpressure


For as long as The Talk of Gasoline Alley was available to listeners online I was a faithful listener. If I’m not mistaken, that goes back to 2000. That’s at least when I was first made aware of it being available. Once they were converted into podcasts, before the term podcast was even invented – I downloaded as many as I could and still have each one from 2000 through 2020 on my phone. Instead of music, that is what I will listen to a lot of times either driving, working in the yard or whenever I choose to go walking.

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The Field is Now Set…and Re-Set

Posted in IndyCar on May 18, 2026 by Oilpressure


The field is now set for the 110th Running of the Indianapolis 500; and it has now been re-set. Two cars failed post-inspection last night, for pretty much the same infraction that disqualified two Andretti cars from the post-race results last year.

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Alex Palou Earns His Second Pole

Posted in IndyCar on May 17, 2026 by Oilpressure


An uneventful early afternoon saw all thirty-three drivers qualify for the 110th Running of the Indianapolis 500, and set the last seven rows of the starting grid. During a 90-minute window, where the teams that found themselves in the front four rows, went back and made some adjustments on their cars. Their goal? To make the Fast Six. Then those final six would battle it out for the pole.

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