Two areas of concern are lack of down force and tires. Essentially, the race tracks are prepped for the fuel cars, and they require less real bite because of the amount of down force that they are able to generate with their wing/spoiler package. P/S cars have very little of either because of the negative effect on performance. Fuel cars can generate about 10,000 lbs. of down force while a P/S can only generate about 500 lbs. Plus, due to the way that P/S has it's spoiler, some can actually generate lift. That is why P/S loves wind tunnel test time.
If you recall, a few years ago at E-Town, the race track was prepped in such a way that it favored the P/S cars, but the fuel cars were "chunking" tires because of too much bite. If I remember right, they called that race and we had to go back after the race track was "fixed". This battle continues today, tracks prepped for P/S are not good for fuel cars and vice versa.
Personally I think that it is time for Goodyear to come up with a new P/S tire that will work better with the way that race tracks are prepped. The present Goodyear tire has been around for over six years with little, or no, change. If you were in the tower, looking down the race track you will see that most every P/S car "black tracks" from the starting line to past the 1000' mark. That is a spinning tire, and it's the same sensation as driving on ice. Many different types of track prep have been tried, but IMO the only time it worked for all parties was when Chad Head called the shots.
One other thing that should be mentioned, is the quality of the track surface. Most of the older tracks just don't have a good enough surface for the P/S cars. Just about every track has some bumps and dips, but if the surface itself is good, the tires won't spin after they come out of the bump or dip. BTW, Firebird has one of the worst track surfaces
You can't take tire spin out of the equation because controlled spin is what makes cars fast . Out of control spin makes cars dangerous.
That's my $.02 worth.
Pat