Originally posted by EAPCPA@Dec 7 2005, 07:07 PM
I am a new member and as soon as I can figure out all of the acronyms I will be able to give an intelligent opinion. .....[snapback]67549[/snapback]
A first post always deserves a "Welcome"!
Your posts point is well taken.
Can we agree on one thing here guys?
IF it's called "IT_", it should respect the IT category rulebook, and merely be another set of spec lines.
From there, it's a matter of deciding:
-Does it fit the overall philosophy of IT?
-Is there a call for a class above ITS?
-Where will the cars to populate it come from?
-Will there be adequate cars to warrant the creation of a new class?
-Will it steal cars from other classes?
Depending on the answers to the above, some follow ups could be:
-If the desire is to give ex Touring cars a place to "upgrade" to after their run is up, will they fit the performance envelope?
-If the car count is potentially inadequate, do the parameters get opened to allow other configurations currently disallowed, such as: all wheel drive, turbocharged or supercharged, and other engine configurations-V8, etc.?
I will comment on philosophy-
20 years ago the automotive landscape was much different, and I think we need to look at the original philosophy in the light of today, not 20 years ago. "Inexpensive" means something much different now. I think the arguement that such a class is in conflict of the original "cheap to run" philosophy is a red herring. First...EVERY car that is classed won't be expensive OR cheap to prep and run. The class will, presumably, have cars that are expensive, and some that aren't. Besides, there are the lower classes that can maintain the "cheaper" and of things.
As has been pointed out, 20 years ago, a Corvette barely had 300Hp. Now sedans by the dozen boast that kind of power. Economy cars are over what ITS cars had! If the category is to flourish, there needs to be long term strategic thinking that recognizes this, as well as other factors in the changing landscape.
-So, my answer is YES, it fits the philosophy, in todays terms.
-And YES, there is certainly a call. We are turning down classification requests more frequently because they exceed the performance envelopes of the available classes.
-I think we could see a few fresh cars that have never been raced, a smattering of cars from the more enthusiastic racers in BMWCCA, PCA, et al., and if we set it up right, some Touring crossovers.
-YES, in some ares, there will be good support, but...in others it will remain thin, as it is today.
-YES, it will "steal" cars from other classes, but in small numbers. It will also help retain certain members who aspire to faster cars, or certain models that aren't currently classed, who would have gone elsewhere.
In the end, the net net, I think, is that it is worth the time to flesh it out.
Send those cards and letters!