Walter was the crew chief for the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in the Busch Series in 2007, working with drivers Casey Mears and Landon Cassill. In 2008, when Hendrick's Nationwide team merged into JR Motorsports, Walter moved to JRM. Since the No. 24 team was shut down as part of the merger, he became crew chief of the No. 5 car, replacing Mike Bumgarner, who remained with Hendrick.
In late February 2008, he was suspended for six races for having an illegal rear spoiler in the opening inspection on Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s racecar. He was fined $25,000 and placed on probation until December 31, 2008. He resigned from JR Motorsports in July 2008 before the race at IRP.[1]
After not working for any team for the remainder of 2008, he joined Penske Racing's No. 12 Nationwide Series team as the crew chief for rookie Justin Allgaier for the 2009 season. They did not win any races that year, but they finished sixth in points. The duo remained together in 2010, and they did score their first win at the spring Bristol race. Allgaier finished fourth in points and was the highest finishing Nationwide Series regular in the standings.
Due to sponsor Verizon leaving NASCAR after 2010, the No. 12 team could not find enough sponsorship, and Allgaier left for Turner Motorsports for 2011. However, Walter remained with Penske and continued to crew chief the same car when it was fielded part-time for Sam Hornish Jr. Hornish would run twelve races that year, picking up one win at Phoenix towards the end of the season. Additional sponsorship was found after they scored that win, which enabled the team to go back to full-time in 2012. Despite finishing fourth in the standings, Hornish went winless.
When MWR closed down after 2015, Walter was picked up by Tommy Baldwin Racing to work on their No. 7 car as the head of engineering.[2] However, TBR would also go on to close down (after 2016), leaving him without a job again.
According to his LinkedIn profile, Walter joined Richard Childress Racing as an engineer in 2017, where according to Racing-Reference, he also served for one race at Talladega as the interim crew chief for Daniel Hemric's No. 21 Xfinity Series team. After one year with RCR, he moved to DGR-Crosley starting in 2018, where he also served as an engineer.
Before the 2019 season, Walter was supposed to be the car chief for Ty Gibbs' No. 17 team in the K&N East Series for DGR-Crosley, but ahead of the season, he was given another hefty suspension, this time for illegally testing in January of that year. His L-6 suspension was originally indefinitely,[3] but the team appealed and the suspension was reduced.[4] It is unclear when exactly he was reinstated by NASCAR, but after returning, he served as the engineer for Tyler Ankrum's No. 17 team in the Truck Series.[5]
Walter returned to crew chiefing in 2020, leaving DGR-Crosley to join GMS Racing to work on their new No. 26 truck, driven by Ankrum after he also left DGR.[5] In 2021, GMS switched Walter and their No. 24 crew chief Charles Denike, with Walter becoming the crew chief of the No. 24, now driven by Raphaël Lessard, and Denike becoming the crew chief for the No. 26 of Ankrum.[6]
He left GMS to be the crew chief for Our Motorsports' new No. 27 car in the Xfinity Series in 2022, driven by Jeb Burton.[7]
Walter returned to GMS in 2023 to be the crew chief for Rajah Caruth in the No. 24 truck.[8]
Personal life
Walter attended Cornell University where he joined the Formula Society of Automotive Engineers' race car design team. His design team won the national championship twice, enhancing his love for racing. He is married to Sherry Walter.[citation needed]