I dunno if his car is fixed yet or not. Like you, I didn't say anything to the guy cause I had no dog in the hunt. I figure unless it is my business then I should stay out of it. I don't know the guy outside of the driver school, but he was a nice enough guy. I don't think he was intentionally cheating to gain an advantage. He was just naive to the process. So much so that when I ran into him at a later Fl Region event, he was ironically complaining about the legality of other ITR cars. Cars which, from what I could tell, looked to be within the rules.
Isn't it the unwritten responsibility of the more experienced racers to help guide the newbies? I think in a case like this, it may even be better if someone with 'no dog in the hunt' to make a comment to the guy. It makes it a much more objective situation, rather than a confrontational one. Especially when someone that's in his class may not feel as kind-hearted.
There's certainly a way to approach the situation in a non-confrontational manner, so why not try to help the new guy out and help avoid a potential not-so-nice confrontation down the road?
I've read things in this thread that I find troubling. They are why some things may never change.
"I've got no dog in the hunt"
"1st time there, and didn't want to rial the natives"
"The Region has a 'liberal' interpretation of the rules"
It's the general mindset of "I don't care as long as it doesn't directly impact me and negatively affect my finishing position." It's like the guy that gets a ticket for 10mph over the limit on the highway, when he's previously either passed the cops doing that much or more, or has been stopped and let go in a similar situation. We all have heard the line "But everyone else is doing it."
I'm certainly not as well versed in policy issues as Dr. K (heck, I didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn), but I'm sure he can comment on 'expected response' when the general implementation of policy deviates from the written statement of said policy, on a fairly regular basis, only to have the written statement version trotted out "when it suits them".
This doesn't mean that you can't take a pragmatic approach, and consider mitigating factors, but a more even, uniform implementation of policy is better in the long run, IMHO. As was stated earlier, you get the SCCA that you deserve. The fact that people perceive that a Region takes a 'liberal' interpretation of the rules, and that they don't feel bothered by this, speaks volumes.
Back to lurk mode.
BTW, nice to see you guys again.