A lot of great insight has already been given and my thoughts are very much in-line with a lot of what has been said. For what it's worth (mainly for Bill's benefit) I had written a response yesterday and even though much of what I say has been covered, I'll post it. Bill, keep in mind through all of this that the reason this thread has gotten so much attention and members' time in thoughtfully replying is because we all care about the club and about making our fellow drivers better. I hope you realize after all this that any one of the people in this thread would be more than happy to take what they are saying on the forum and work with you in person to help you where they can. That's pretty cool
After reading through Bill's PDF it is clear that a lot of thought and time went into it. I have to agree with a lot of what the dissenters are saying. I don't think this proposed system accomplishes one of the most important big picture goals most people that participate in our driving events have in common...
becoming better drivers! In fact, I think it would have the direct opposite impact if put in place as it would encourage car development before/rather than driver development.
Dave H. brought up some of my driving history with this club and I think it is a good example and proves my point, as well as shows how well the system in place works and why it is important to keep it (of course minor tweaks are encouraged and expected over time). Let's rewind 5 years and look at my path. Then let's assume that 5 years ago rather than me starting with the club as I did with the rules that were in place, instead, let's assume the proposed rules were in place.
Path 1 - Current RulesI showed up for my first AX in my 993 C4S with PSS10 suspension, M030 ARBs, 235/285 300tw tires and no track time in the car. Of course I had fun but was I fast? Hell no! It was not only all new to me but the car wasn't set up anywhere close to being fast (TONS of UNDERSTEER). Fast forward several AXs and a PDS later and I was building a decent foundation of driving skills and I was getting good enough to realize that I knew what I wanted the car to do, I just couldn't make it do it (nor could instructors who drove it for the most part). At that point I started my journey of reading books and really experimenting with different tire sizes, tires, pressures, ARBs, alignment settings, etc. This was a tremendous education for me over a 2 year time frame and I was learning how to set a car up to get the most out of it along with learning what those changes did to the handling of the car.
Why was I doing all this??? To get faster of course.
How did I know I could go faster? I had two very good drivers with well setup cars in my early days help me realize how much faster the same classed car could be...Tawfik B. and Joel Bowman. They were in my same class (actually, at first I was classed higher than them because of how the rules treated my widebody...I was still slower than them) and they consistently beat me by a couple seconds. I knew they were better drivers with more experience and had cars that were optimized for our class, this motivated me to learn how to set my car up properly
as well as how to drive a well setup car. I think it was after my second season of AX I applied everything I had learned in terms of driving and car setup and removed the AWD system, put in race seats and a roll bar and had the car aligned how I wanted (with guidance of course from the race shop). The car was faster for sure in terms of raw time around the track but the balance of the car was transformed and certainly didn't have any understeer anymore! I spent probably half a season or more learning how to drive my "new" car fast. I went through a lot of rear tires with my tail-happy antics

. Only then was I starting to really get faster and give my top competitors a run for their money. Before I knew it I was putting that once slow, pig of a 993 consistently 1st in class, top 5 in raw times and top 5 in BRI. The point...the competitors in my class showed me I could be faster, I took an interest in learning how to get faster, applied it and practiced with seat time. Our current rules gave me the competition and structure to develop into a decently fast driver. I could have continuing to develop my 993 to further optimize it for its class and make it even faster in its class and a top BRI car but I realized it wasn't the car to do that in and would have cost a lot more money than I wanted to throw at it.
Path 2 - Proposed RulesI show up to my first AX in that same heavy, understeering monster of a 993 C4S with PSS9 suspension, M030 ARBs, 235/285 300tw tires and no track time in the car. I would have fun of course and after a pre-determined number of events I would move out of Novice and into an "RR" class. I would be competing with all kinds of different cars, potentially a well driven 356 or even a Gt3...not driven so well. If I drove well on a particular day I would win my class and feel good. I would look forward to the next event and hope I drove well, but not too well because then my index would change and I would risk getting bumped into the next class where I'd probably be at the bottom of that class. Once bumped up a class, I'd be motivated to win that class and do what it takes to gain that 2 second gap. I'd go buy wider tires maybe, or r-compounds, or add stiffer ARBs. Eventually, I'd get to a point that no matter how much money I threw at the car I'd hit a plateau and my lack of driving skill would really show. To get better, I'd be forced to work on my driving (not a bad thing); however, now, I'd be doing it in a car that needed to be pushed very fast to approach the limits due to the go-fast modifications I had made to get to this point. That would only slow my progress as a driver and potentially be a safety concern. Also, what would be missing is how would I be able to compare myself to cars that should have similar performance. I might be able to look at a similar car in a class or two faster than me but I wouldn't be able to know if that car is there because of the modifications or the driver's skill.
The point - for me (and I think there are many out there that think this way), I will always want to be a better driver and I want a system in place that will allow me to try and gauge my ability to drive and watch me progress. That said, what system would allow the drivers to get an idea of who the better drivers were? The way I understand your proposal, it wouldn't really tell us. If I'm consistently the best driver in my class currently, under your system, a newer driver with 6 months experience in a 991 could be in my class and "win" the class that day. What does that tell us? Nothing. In fact, it might even send that newer driver the wrong message that just because he won that he is a good driver. Let me put this another way. Under our current rules, if we took the consistent winners from each class to the annual Parade to compete in an AX, I'd bet we'd have a pretty good chance of doing well with each of those drivers. Under the proposed system, if we took all winners of the RR classes, it would be pretty hard to say with any consistency that these car/driver combos would do well compared to national competition using a more traditional rule set.
After being involved with our current system for a while I have developed a certain understanding (just my opinion of course) that every car out there has a "sweet spot" in terms of what mods it should take and what class it should fall into in order to be optimized for not only its CC class but also the BRI. The next critical step in the equation is to learn to drive a class optimized car to the limit while continuing to drive the perfect line. Combining all of these tasks in one beautiful lap at an AX/TT is what we all strive for...perfection! The beauty of this sport is that it's impossible be perfect 100% of the time and that's what keeps us coming back.
Now enter my 986, "Cupcake," a car setup I designed on paper before anything else. Many people have questioned whether it is really a CC3 car and if it is legal. I gave it to our own tech guru, Mr. Steve Grosskemper, at his shop for almost an hour to go through it thoroughly, which he did. This was not just a parking lot inspection, the car is legit. Why is it so fast? Simple, it is almost completely optimized for its class AND, more importantly I found its "sweet spot" picking certain modifications that enhanced its weak points. On top of that, I know how to drive it at the limit. The result is a car that can win its class by 3+ seconds routinely and win the BRI.
You said you wanted data...my path is my data. If you want more details to understand some of the ins and outs, I'd be more than happy to share.
Respectfully, Bill, I don't know your driving ability nor do I know how well your car is setup or optimized. However, if I had to guess, I'd say you could benefit greatly from getting the guidance of some of the guys who have similar cars and who are fast. Follow their lead and understand the path they have taken to get to where they are. It's not by accident. If you feel the rules are unfair to your platform, make a suggestion to the rules committee.