No, its not. But it would be wise to take a better look at the competitors in each class and understand why they are in Prepared or Street Prepared before declaring the current classing system better than anything proposed.Jimmy Pet wrote:
Woah,,, woah,,, woah,,,
So your proposal is to change an entire class philosophy for the most unlimited build cars in the club,,, based around the bottom of the spectrum cars who were bumped into it by an arcane rule like a headliner or carpet?
Why not just change that wording in the rules,,, and get rid of arcane bumping points,,, not,,, dissect and fundamentally change an entire class for the low end of the spectrum
The nature of the new T rules has fixed your perceived portion of the problem. None of those Spec Miatas will be bumped into Prepared,,, so now we have the perfect reason to LEAVE PREPARED ALONE.
Dont penalize the guys who actually have cars at the pointy end of the class for all those who were "bumped" into it.
Fix the reason for the silly bumps,,,, not,,, penalize the guys who actually have Prepared class cars.
That thinking is really what is broken, not the Prepared rules.
The 'bumps' to take the street and under-prepared cars out of Prepared and Street Prepared has worked. Now there is hardly anyone in each of the 7 SP and P classes. If we combine the remainder that have stayed in SP and P, who gets penalized?
I'm glad were in agreement on at least one thing!!!Lap times are a function of car and driver,,, and should not ever factor into classing.
Car preparation alone determines class.
Drivers are drivers, they are meat puppets when cars get classed.
The comparison of the lap times across the Prepared classes means nothing. It just means who and what showed up on any given day.
It should not be used as a benchmark to dismantle a class based around an open ruleset when you have people competing in it who like the open ruleset.
Basing classes off cars that don't show up to COM events makes as much sense as classing cars based on lap times, headliners, COM bars, or lug nuts.It blows my mind that the memo may not have been fully circulated that Prepared class is a class for actual fully Prepared competition cars.
Yes, if you show up with a street Miata with only part of the preparation done to make it a full on competition car,,, yep you are going to get crushed in PC.
Go back to your garage and finish your "Race Car".
Show up with an F Production Miata that weighs 2100lbs and has 12:1 compression race engine and a dog ring race trans running on race slicks,,, yep,,, you will run really well in PC.
The current 'problem' with SP and P is that there are too many classes, no close competition except for a few cars (Will and Gordon), and there are 'silly things' that separate the classes. You agree that turbo cars should not run in B with the NA 6 cylinder cars. Adding two more classes for turbo cars makes no sense to me when we're already handing out 'Everyones a Winner' participation trophies due to lack of competition.I am not fighting for my (or anyones) perceived place at the pointy end of my class.
I "am" fighting for the openess of the class to remain just that so that what is done to the car,,, within those very basic parameters that exist now,,, never has to factor in to what other types of cars and power plants we compete against.
We should come up with something that combines the classes (or divides them, however you want to look at it) in a way that makes sense and is fair for the current competitors in those classes. I do not agree that cylinder count or turbos are the proper way to structure the classes. And flat out saying 'NO, ITS FINE NOW' isn't going to get us anywhere.
I want to run against cars that have similar power regardless of engine design and take no glory in beating a car with a similar engine design that makes 100hp less, 'racecar' or not. I also take no glory in winning by default. I want a rabbit.
I would like to see the rules open and simple, but making them strictly power to weight might not be the right way for our club. You mentioned how NASA GTS rules make it difficult for a 4 cylinder car to be competitive. And its true. If you or Fred raced in NASA GTS you would be in GTS3 or the faster GTS4. The current WGI track record for GTS3 is 2:02. NASA's time trial rules would not have you in the same class as a GTS3 or 4 car. You would most likely be in TT3 where you have a much better chance. (FYI, NASA has a Pwr/wt modifier for smaller displacement motors in TT3, TT2, TT1 and TTU).