Originally Posted by
Marshall Mauney
Existing cars in certain classes with race-built engines would be a real issue, but I think that this would work for SM, SRF, Touring, B-Spec, FB, FF (Fit engine) and a whole bunch more. Enforcement could work the same as it has worked at the Sprints and Runoffs in the past - add a tracer. Every engine that has a closed-loop control system should be able to adapt, and that's nearly anything in recent production.
Legitimate point, but getting more competitors on-track would mitigate at least some of their lost revenue. Additionally, knowing that you're going to get all of a given class' business allows you to run higher volumes at lower mix, which increases margins. I believe it's worth continuing to explore.
Why would it work in one venue and not another? I tossed this out as little more than an "outside of the box" thought experiment, but it seems to have a positive impact on a lot of local series.....
My thinking is that 2 days' track rental is 33% less than 3 days' rent. It also significantly reduces the costs to both competitors and club staff in vacation use, lodging, food, crew expense, etc. It's a real cost shift.
As for the Sprints, it's a single race this year. Why do we need three days to run one race per run group?
Again, I think it's worth a shot to reduce all of the ancillary costs. I've seen doubles that were effectively scheduled as two one-day events, so why not split that? The track could sell Saturday as a test day to offset their one-day weekend rental.
How many old CSR/DSR cars are now sidelined or relegated to track day cars because they just can't compete with the new all-carbon tub cars? What has that done to the cost to compete in P1/P2? When was the last time a tube frame FA won the Runoffs?
Yes, the all-inclusive philosophy is our heritage, but it's also the reason that we have an alphabet soup of classes.
I'm not certain I agree. Yes, I spent the $$$ to go run the COTA major, but I probably won't ever go back. Why not? Too much money to run with the same guys I can race at Road America, Blackhawk, or even Grattan or Nelson Ledges. It's a "bucket list" item like dining at Paul Bocuse - but that doesn't mean that we can all afford it every weekend.
IMO, the core value of the Majors program isn't the tracks. It's the competition - and the competition is better when we have more competitors. If a less-expensive Major at Grattan or Nelson Ledges drew as many cars as at Road America, it would be a great race. Do I enjoy having raced at Watkins Glen, COTA, Road America, et al? Sure! In the end, though, most of us only have a certain budget each year; lower costs per weekend = more weekends of racing = higher car counts = healthier club.
If we want to reverse the downward trend, we need to be open to discussing new ideas and challenging our core assumptions, wouldn't you think?