I know the pro is a misnomer (isn't improved also? ) but hey is it the class title or the class racing we care about?
http://www.nasaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=45021#45021
http://www.nasaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=45021#45021
NASA TEXAS has a spec 7 class I'm told. Maby all of NASA has it, and no one has ask????
Locally NASA will ackowledge the Spec 7 cars, but when it comes to a national sort of event, the Texas rules will apply. The rules in SoPac and Texas are vastly different. The Texas cars are somewhere betware our Pro 7 and our Spec 7 class. Not much chance our cars could compete on the same track.
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Don't forget that NASA has a national spec Toyo RA1 this year. Unless the class you run in has a rule that circumvents it, you have to run the Toyo.
If you want to run at their "National Championship" race at Mid Ohio, you MUST run the Toyo.
Don't expect NASA to be "IT friendly." They have a severe complex when it comes to SCCA drivers coming to their races and whipping their "regular" folks asses. Top NASA officials have not been shy about publicly stating that they aren't all that interested in crossover drivers from SCCA.
I'm surprised the even bothered to go through all that stuff Greg mentioned to try to work SCCA cars in.
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I understand the concept of easing the transition from TT to road racing but I have a suspicion that, particularly if this catches on and people get serious about running PT (like at a "national championship" event?), it's going to become pretty clear why nobody has done this kind of thing for a heads-up racing category before.
NASA is going to need some serious review of policy and practices to support this thing. For example, I've been told that each entrant is supposed to provide a current spec sheet with EACH race entry, so they can be kept on file and available to others for review. (If I have no idea what Billy Bob is supposed to have done to his Pinto, how do I know if he's legal or not?)
K
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So Mr. Pooch, did they at least kiss you?[/b]
The intent of the rules and safety considerations will be the overriding factors in making such decisions, as opposed to a constrained interpretation of the rules based on phraseology or verbiage.[/b]