It debuted at Atlanta Motor Speedway,[6] but finished 43rd after Hmiel was swept up in a multi-car accident on the first lap.
Hmiel raced the car the following week at Bristol Motor Speedway, and finished 40th due to overheating.
10 team became part of Braun Racing through an alliance with ppc Racing, which had fielded the 10 car since 2000. ppc driver John Andretti ran the Daytona season opener with 2006 sponsor Camping World.
Brian Vickers drove a part-time schedule for Braun in 2008, with Blaney and Justin Marks driving in one race apiece.
The Team ran again full-time in 2009 with rotating drivers David Reutimann, Kelly Bires, Brian Scott, Marc Davis, Chad Blount, Justin Marks and Cup drivers Kasey Kahne, Elliott Sadler, and Reed Sorenson under a partnership with Richard Petty Motorsports.
[9][15] Other drivers for the team included David Reutimann, Chad Blount, Mikey Kile, Casey Mears, Reed Sorenson and Josh Wise.
Turner drivers Ricky Carmichael, James Buescher and Scott Wimmer made starts for the team at the end of the season.
11 moved to Joe Gibbs Racing's Nationwide Series car, coincidentally driven by Scott.
Braun moved his operation to the Busch Series in 2003, in a technical alliance with Chip Ganassi Racing.
19 for Chad Blount and Ganassi drivers Casey Mears, David Stremme, and Jamie McMurray.
[19] Mears ran the most races for Braun,[19] winning a pole at Chicagoland Speedway and finishing in the top-ten four times in fourteen starts.
32, running full-time with sponsorship from TrimSpa X32 (leading to the number change) and Stremme as the driver.
[19] Stremme won a pole at The Milwaukee Mile and five top-fives before moving to FitzBradshaw Racing towards the end of the season.
[21] Shane Hmiel was named the full-time driver in 2005, and the team switched from Dodge to Chevrolet in an alliance with Dale Earnhardt, Inc.
The team also gained sponsorship from WinFuel Multivitamins, owned by TrimSpa's parent company.
[22] Hmiel won the pole position at Texas and three top-fives when he was suspended by NASCAR in violation of its drug policy.
[23][24] Jorge Goeters, Ron Hornaday Jr., Blount, and Jason Leffler finished out the year for the team.
After struggling to find primary sponsorship for 2006, Braun merged with Akins Motorsports (then a Dodge team) and hired Jason Leffler as the full-time driver, running as Braun-Akins Racing.
[25] Blaney had a few good runs and then pulled off a big victory in the fall event at Lowe's Motor Speedway.
32 was driven by Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Brian Vickers and James Buescher with sponsorship from Dollar General and Hass Avocados.
Lamar was released midway through the season, and was replaced by Reed Sorenson at Gateway, Villeneuve at Montreal, Reutimann at ORP, Bristol, Dover, and Homestad, and West Series driver Brian Ickler at Iowa and Memphis.
32 Chevrolet Silverado in the UNOH 200 presented by Zloop on August 19 at Bristol Motor Speedway, with two additional races planned.
In 2016, Haley won the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East championship with a record average finish of 3.4.