Mitch Wright was a frontrunner 20+ years ago when he ran the Renault Cup, and ran head-to-head with guys who went on to pro careers and club racing championships. A couple years ago, as series manager for WCTouring, he was getting pressured to give the VW Jettas a weight break because "they were just never going to be competitive."
So, out comes the Nomex and Wright makes the car in question go a chunk faster than its regular driver ever had, in his first session on the track. Denied.
I'm just sayin'...
The problem here is that, whether the lap times are trotted out directly in discussion or not, they are fundamental to the thinking behind ANY argument that ANY car is mis-classed or mis-specified. Just like, if the car in question were running up front, it would be presumed to be correctly spec'd. Both are faulty positions if the greater issues are paramount. And the greater issue here is the longterm health of the IT category, which trumps any individual driver's or car's "right" to be competitive. Club Racing doesn't owe you that, can't guarantee that, and can fark up entire programs by trying to achieve it.
As for, "If 75# is nothing, just give it to me." That's (put bluntly) crapola. What I said was that if the process is run and we get repeatability within 75#, that's pretty damned good - good enough, in fact.
I guess it's just a good mood - getting caught up with life - that's got me back into this conversation but the earlier point that maybe the Production wars (in the meeting room, not on track) would be a better place for anyone who believes that they have a fundamental right to lobby for their own competitiveness, or for weight to be stacked on the competition, based on on-track evidence.
Another way to look at this situation? If in fact the M44 engine gains nothing from an IT build, leave it untouched freeing up a huge chunk of dough to do other things that will likely make the package faster - suspension engineering, engine management, dyno time, driver coaching, tires, and testing.
K