RobL wrote:
Even in "spec" classes you can't get cars to within a few of tenths of each other...
Never seen an SRF race, have you?
RobL wrote:
... I can't see how having different cars with different modifications gets them "equal."
Never seen a touring car race either, huh?
RobL wrote:
I won't try and change your mind on that point.
Good, because it's very difficult to convince me that "A" is true when I've seen "not A" in person with my own two eyes. Especially when "A" is also counter-intuitive.
RobL wrote:
But, what fun is it really to walk up to a course and know that you are going to get beat because there are "too many straights."
I agree, it's a lot more fun to just stay home and know you're going to get beat because you have a G-stock car that isn't a MINI Cooper S.
/sarcasm
RobL wrote:
... those of us at the highest level of the sport already can predict the outcome.
I'll give you an example - I race in a pro class on index against other classes. There is a Formula 500 driver that is my main competition. When he designs the course, there are many elements that favor his car, like slaloms offset in a good way. He'll beat me by over 1.5 seconds. When someone else makes the course and it's more fair and I'll beat him but by not quite as much. Walking his courses, I know the outcome ahead of time. It removes the fun because the outcome is predetermined and it has nothing to do with how well we each drove.
The same thing is true in non-indexed competition. Take two national caliber drivers, put one in a fully-prepped (G-stock) MINI S and put the other in a fully-prepped anything else in G-stock, and I can tell you who will win. I don't need to walk the course, or even look at the course map (and I'm not even at the highest level of the sport). The outcome is predetermined and has very little--I won't say nothing--to do with how well either one drove.
What it boils down to is that you like the current system, which is fine. I don't have a dog in the fight, but just observed that something different (which I admit has no chance of happening) would create more variety. You've spent all your time on this thread arguing about how it's impossible and/or impractical, despite the fact that competitive motorsports from the club level to professional touring car racing employ such systems. Even the ALMS has elements of this, where things like rate of fuel delivery during a pit stop is used to create parity between the diesel and gasoline prototypes.
Moreover, I have actually observed local clubs that have classing systems more like NASA's TT classification system (base classing with points for various modifications and upclassing). Their autocrosses have more variety at the top on any given day and are generally regarded as more fun by all but the hard core competitive SCCA autocrossers (of which you appear to be one).
Most of the hard core competitive types seem to derive more enjoyment from winning than participating. In fact, you said yourself that you can't have fun if you know you can't win. Imagine what it must be like to know you can't win, not just today, but for so long as you continue to drive a car that isn't one of the nine anointed.
I'm in a different camp. I don't really care about winning. There's plenty of competition in my day job, I'm not interested in more on the weekends. I derive more enjoyment from seeing a bunch of different cars prepared in whatever way does the most for that car, with a bunch of drivers going at it. This is why I spend my motorsports participation time, money, effort, and energy on open track days.
In any case, I'm certain I'm not going to convince you of anything either, which is also fine.