Jeff, you avoided the question just as a CRB member would. EXPLAIN how you came up with the conclusion that the Audi is an example of an overdog. You yourself said it was a good example in your post. If you meant to say the CRB used this as an example than you as an ITAC member should demand that they would need to expain it. Using the fact that it beat 2 of the CRB members at the ARRC in 1 session at 1 track 5 yrs ago about 1 second slower than the track record at the time can't possibly be a good example of an overdog. Can it?
Stephen
HE's not saying that it IS an overdog...think in the cup half full/empty method.
The perception (right or wrong) is that the car is currently competitive. IF it lost 200 HUNDRED plus pounds, the perception is that it would be MORE competitive.
That's simple and easy to understand, right?
The ENTIRE rest of the club, (ad hocs) thinks in terms of weight adjustments based on what they
see with their own eyes on the track. Since the CRB is made up of guys from other ad hocs, it is easy to see that the IT method of classing first via a process that largely ignores on track performance,
then using on track performance to trigger a closer look/more research, is 180 degrees
opposite everything they've done for their entire racing careers.
So, when the Audi recommendation sprang up, the CRB thought we were NUTS. It just didn't make sense.
OF COURSE we argued the case, that we didn't know the cars, the legality of the cars, that the perception of speed was just a perception, that the cars hold no track records, etc etc, etc, but 200 hundred pounds is a LOT. And of COURSE we argued that should the weight reduction result in obvious on track dominance, we'd use the loop back methods
built into the V1.2 of the process to dig deeper, find the data, and adjust based on the data.
But, the CRB thought we were nuts. And I'm told, along that time, an edict was handed down form the BoD to cease using the E & O as a method of adjusting existing cars. (Along with other things that were being done, presumably by other committees.)
It's my view that the CRB should have held the recommendation up, and returned it to the ITAC, with a note: "Fails stink test, please research and return recommendation with real world data to support this, or whatever recommendation you wish to make".
Instead, we got the "no more adjusting existing cars" (on the books for 5 years or more), "and only overodgs get adjusted (with V1.0), and new cars can be classed".
So that's where we are.