MarthaMc wrote:
**NEW for 2016**
Any person with “student” status must be driving a Porsche!!!
Gary Burch wrote:MarthaMc wrote:
**NEW for 2016**
Any person with “student” status must be driving a Porsche!!!
what is up with this?
you have to be a member to attend so what difference does it make what you drive?
Greg Phillips wrote:Gary Burch wrote:MarthaMc wrote:
**NEW for 2016**
Any person with “student” status must be driving a Porsche!!!
what is up with this?
you have to be a member to attend so what difference does it make what you drive?
They want to be sure we have plenty of DE students for the big tracks?![]()
![]()
Greg
ScandinavianFlick wrote:Marcus,
With respect, I have to disagree. I can't speculate as to the reasoning behind the new policy, but I don't think your theory holds up (also just my $.02).
1.) Safety critical items are essentially universal among all cars. Condition of the tires, brakes, suspension components, restraints, and controls are the most vital, and are checked by the tech team on every car for that reason. Model specific issues are exceptionally rare (Fiesta base model rollover at low tire pressures when autocrossing, for example) and most have been found by the SCCA, with their rules specifically barring those models from competition. Adopting their exclusion list would be a much more logical means of addressing that concern.
2.) If a car is unsafe for autocross (worn out suspension, etc) it can and should be excluded by the tech team, that's their singular purpose. If a student with an autocross-worthy car is still overdriving, then it is down to their instructor to control the situation or remove them from the event. Porsches are just as susceptible to this as any other car; the last PDS proved that. That's why we have an exhaustive driver's/safety meeting at every event- we have clear expectations and clear consequences for repeatedly violating them.
3.) The fundamental principles of vehicle dynamics (weight transfer, straight line braking, progressive inputs, looking ahead) that we strive to impress upon our students are common to every make, model, and configuration of car. The finer points of model specific driving (trailbraking in 911s, power to recover from oversteer in a FWD car, never lift midcorner in an S2000, etc) are only taught to more advanced students once they have shown basic capability and common sense. Any instructor worth their little blue card can provide valuable training to a novice regardless of the car.
or the cdi's should not make a decision without consulting those affected by that decision
Ryan McClune wrote:Also, does this rule apply to the PDS?
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 571 guests