Originally posted by zracre@Oct 11 2005, 03:24 PM
........ I just dont like the idea of having a car classed a certain way for years, build one, then have it re-classed or adjusted in a way that costs lots of money to try and make it at least equal to other well prepped cars out there.
Wait.......stop.....the logic is missing here. First, big picture, the idea isn't to take 10/10ths winning cars and make them second string. No, the idea is to take 10/10ths cars that have known qualities and physical properties that make them potential overdogs, and make them contenders with other 10/10ths efforts. If the development has been done on the car, then any additional weight will result in some adjustments, but not a whole house redevelopment effort. Again, the idea isn't to penalize, but create a more level playing field.
my point is that if a car comes to a class and destroys everyone in the first year or 2, then maybe something should be done obviously,
Well, not really....if a car's physical properties are such that it has the potential to kill the class, then yes, adjustments are in order. Actual race results must be examined with extreme care, as they can be very misleading.
but dont penalize a group of people for having spent the time and money.
Again, the idea isn't to penalize...but look at it from the other angle. If a car gets classed, and is later seen to have more potential then originally realized, the entire class suffers. ITA has a number of such cars. They have resulted both from rules changes, such as the ECU relaxation rule, and due to the understandable over acheiving nature of certain models. Dozens of cars have been marginalized due to classing issues. Should the
entire class suffer? The
ENTIRE class has already spent money, and put forth years of effort, which goes down the tubes when a car comes online and is an overacheiver. Is it fairer to "penalize" the single or the few models that are the overacheivers, or the entire remaining class?
I think if a car comes to the class and is uncompetitive, like the MR2, it should be adjusted or moved down (and adjusted) to keep interest without losing people. .
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The problem with adjusting all the underdogs is of course, the sheer numbers of them, but there are additional issues. The RX-7 and the MR2 are good examples.
IF it was decided that moving the RX-7 to ITB was a good idea, it would have to move down at it's current weight, as any additional weight adjustment would creat a car in violation of the rollcage requirements. (In this case, cars built to the limit of the tubing thickness rules {.095 tubes} will need recaging as the cutoff is 2200 lbs.) Also, many cars just can't lose any more weight..they are running at or above their minimum weight with all the excess that can be removed legally gone.
So, again, the idea is to bring the bottom up, and the top down, while leaving the vast middle alone. hopefully that yields the fewest changes, and creates less overlaps to the classes above and below.
This entire concept has been in process for years, back when Kirk was promoting his IT2 concept, which itself was a reaction to the issues IT was suffering at the time. The first step, and it was a long and tough road to get there, was the creation of the PCA philosophy, and the required rewriting of the basic premise, (and the rulebook), of IT. Those long termers on this board will remember some heated discussions about it.
Even then the discussions ran tangentally into "Lets just add a class between A and S", to "Lets just send all the carbed cars to vintage", but it seemed to me, at least, that the problems in IT could be traced to a relatively small percentage of individual models. The problem was, how to fix it?
With the PCA foundation created and in the book, the mechanism was in place. The second step was to create and fine tune the "process" used to define the classes. The third step was the application of the process in new car classing. The final major step is the adjustment of the existing cars to create a more level landscape, where more cars have a shot, when well prepped and well driven, at the front spot.
I think this proposal
extremely important, and it's the culmination of years of discussion, work and thought, and is the second best thing to hit IT since IT's inception. (PCA is the best, without it, nothing is possible) It has numerous benefits, the most obvious being the leveling of the playing field, but others such as the, (albeit partial) removal of the motive and tempation to cheat, and the restoration of values for marginalized cars.
Of course, it's not nirvana, but in the big picture, it's a great move. The wheels of the SCCA turn slowly....find your local BoD person, or write the CRB and support it if you think it deserves to move forward.