a $4000 shitbox is still a $4000 shitbox no doubt. but to maintain your current finishing position in nationals that you had in regionals, everyone below probably about 5th will end up spending more.[/b]
Well there you go Travis, of course it's going to cost you more to maintain your status quo in Nationals. That holds true for the guys w/ National-eligible cars that run Regionals. I know for a fact that I would have to spend more on my HP Rabbit if I wanted to run up front at Nationals. There's no big surprise there.
The issue we've been discussing is would it cost you more to maintain your positions at
Regionals if IT went National? Don't see how it could. And as I said in an earlier post, you might actually move up as the top guys go to Nationals.
I know that once the class goes national I will have to step up with more money...or development...whatever you want to call it to be even a midpacker...
[/b]
Only if you want to run Nationals Matt, only if you want to run Nationals. Nothing says that you have to. I really don't see why this is such a hard concept for people to grasp. Look at all the other National-eligible classes. Do the folks that run those cars in Regionals have to spend more money because other guys w/ the same car(s) run Nationals? One doesn't really have any impact on the other.
If IT becomes eligible for Nationals, it will probably cost less (and maintain your position on the grid) to run Regionals than it does today, as the max-boogie guys will be off racing Nationals. Or, spend what you're spending now, and move up the grid. You don't see the max-boogie cars running Regionals now, why would you expect IT to be different than that? Today, there's no other place for them to play, so they have to run Regionals.
<tangent mode>
K, I don't believe you would be DFL with your $5,000 Miata because I don't believe YOU can build a Spec Miata for $5,000.
Donor car $2,000
Hard roof $1,000
Bolt in cage $1,000
Shall I continue ?
You finish the cost list
David[/b]
I'm not so sure about that David. Last year, I could have bought a complete, running 1.6 car w/ a hardtop for $1000. After your $1000 bolt-in cage, I'd still have $3k left to put into the car. I'm pretty sure I could have gotten the car on the track for <$5k. Would it run at the pointy end of the field? No, but it would be a fun car to drive, and w/ all the SMs out there, I'm pretty sure I would have had somebody (probably a few) to race with. When you've got fields of more than say 20 cars, you better bring your A game w/ a serious effort if you want to be on the podium.
</tangent mode>
Yeah, for the most part, you'll finish DFL with a 5K SM (or production car for that matter), but not necessarily with an ITB car....
In fact, there was Bildon's ITB VW for sale in the classifieds for around 7K, and this is a pointy end of the field car...for way, way less then 10K.
Your not going to keep many newbies interested in racing if they go a year or two finishing DFL all because IT has become super serious. Now they have to put another 7 or 10K into their car just to finish mid-pack (driving skill aside). This will discourage a lot of new young racers
[/b]
Matt,
Bildon's car for $7k is a pretty good bargin. Why don't you ask Bill what it cost to build that car?
And most newbies aren't going to start off racing Nationals, that arguement doesn't hold water. Or, look at somebody starting out today in ITS or ITA. If you're a newbie starting in ITA anywhere on the East coast, you're probably going to get your head handed to you for quite a while, unless you spend major $$$ and have some serious talent. ITA fields at a MARRS race run about 20 cars. The pointy end of that field are some pretty serious folks. I think it's even moreso for the folks running the NARRC series. Just look at folks like Amy, Serra, Bettencourt, etc. if you don't think so. Those cars are all probably pushing $20k.
The point is, once the class becomes national, you will not see many sub 7K IT cars for sale anymore...The price will go up, just like it did in SM.
Trust me on this.
I dont even know why I"m typing this, I'm sure we all know this right?
Competitive SM=25K
Competitive ITB or ITA=10K
Now, this would make sense if the SM class rules allowed more extensive modifications then IT...but I dont think that is the case, right[/b]
I'm not sure what you base this speculation on. You can buy plenty of <$7k Prod cars today. Just like you can buy $30k+ Prod cars today. SM is not really a good analogy. One of the reasons that costs have gone through the roof is
because it's a spec class. You have to actually spend more money to get around some of the rules. Not unlike the old IT shock rule. Buy a set of Penskes and spend more money to have the threads turned off of them.
And your $10k ITA car may be competitive where you are, but it sure isn't a full-tilt build, and won't be competitive against cars that are. Again, you spout your speculation like it's fact, when there's plenty of evidence to the contrary. And I think it was Andy that pointed it out, with increased popularity comes increased expense to run at the front. A $10k ITB car is more than likely able to be on the podium, in the right hands. But look at the field sizes of ITB compared to ITA. And then, look at how many new cars have been classed in ITB (new cars, not ones that have been moved down from ITA). The problem is, there aren't that many available new cars to put into ITB (and even moreso ITC). The overall performance envelope of new cars that are being produced goes up just about every year. How many new cars are produced that make 100-120 hp? The pool to draw new ITB and ITC cars from is a lot smaller than the pool to draw ITA and ITS (and now ITR) cars from. More choices + newer cars = greater popularity. The guy that starts today w/ a $5k ITA or ITS car is going to spend the whole race looking in his mirrors anyway.