Bill doesn't drive this home enough but IT7 / Spec7 popped up because the lack of a cohesive classification process resulting in some serious overdogs in ITA - sending the 12A to the back. Plenty were built so they created a home for themselves. The SCCA failed these guys.[/b]
Right, the once popular, and some said dominant, 12A was the poster child in my mind for how the classification process was a one way street, and mistakes could only be rectified by making more mistakes. In other words, the CRX got classed way light, so other cars were added to compete with it. Which hammered the rest of the class down the running order even harder.
So, now the 12A is, on paper, in the same league as the rest of the class but min weight is uber-hard to come by. A new build yes, maybe current builds, no. And now that I think about it more, maybe we ought to be leaning more toward guys who did 'reasonable' builds in the past - of which there are what, a hundred 12A's out there? It's tough to go backward once your car is built.
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On paper
given the current constraints of the process, but I would argue the process still fails the car as the real characteristics of the mechanical package are not being fully compesated for. (Huge lack of torque of the rotary, vis a vis the other cars in the class. To the tune of 20 or more percent in many cases). Your point about already built cars needing complete rebuilding to hit new targets is a good one.
Here is my question: Will the 12A in ITB bring guys back from IT7 / Spec 7? I am not sure. They are settled in and presumaby happy - now they have to ballast way up and buy a couple sets of new wheels - all to go slower. Hmmm.
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One thing that has been mentioned, but rather obliquely is the regional naure of our racing. Things are wildly different over the vast expanses. If we decide to, say, move the RX-7 down to ITB, (using the current process assumptions and methods) I suggest it will make zero impact in areas where the IT7 class is doing well. Why would these guys want to move? More expense, more testing, more hassles with a new package, and now they get to be mid pack in ITB? Thats not going to happen. The regions have freedom to make/maintain classes, and they will do just that to protect their bottom line.
And in Nor Cal? Same answer, but for different reasons...the RX-7 (5 of them last April as I recall) is nearly the only ITA car raced out there, except for the double or triple dipping SMs, and I think (Josh help me out here) that when I visited, there wasn't one IT
A Miata out of the over 50 that raced in ITA. And ITB was 3 cars. So here we have another region where the RX-7 guys are kind of playing by themselves.
In the NE, we have the "Mazda Cup" an informally run perpetual trophy that gets handed to the best finishing RX-7 driver in ITA in each race. I doubt that, again, if the process puts the car in B in the same manner as in A, we would see a wholesale buying of wheels and lead weight and testing, just to run for a theoretical mid pack ITB finish. I bet the Region would be approached with an IT7 proposal. Just a guess, but the point is that when we discuss large global changes we have to consider what really happens out in the real world.
Thats why DC is a tempting concept, because it lets the market decide, and the answer can be different where the market is different.