kary wrote:If you are suspected of cheating a weigh in and dyno are relatively cheat comparied to the thousands to tear down a motor. Rather simple really.
I still don't see how you think this is a simple solution, Kary. The practical logistics of measuring the HP of all competitor's cars are daunting, not to mention expensive. Are you saying that there should be a portable dyno in impound at every race? Those machines are not cheap to acquire and operate. I don't know of a single sanctioning body that uses them in the way you are suggesting, amateur or pro. If it is so simple, why is it not practiced anywhere in the motorsports world?
Almost all regulations for highly modified or purpose-built race cars are based on Displacement/Weight, not HP/Weight. That is the truly simple solution, as there are practical limits to how much HP can be developed in a given type of combustion engine with a specified displacement. For our Porsche engines, 100HP/Liter is a pretty good yardstick for how much power can be developed in a normally aspirated engine. For other types of engines (forced induction or rotary types) a multiplier is added to equalize them.
Sure there are. With modern electronic engine management systems, it is a simple matter to "sandbag" or "game" a HP measurement. Fuel and timing maps can be changed with the flick of a switch these days. Even if you had a dyno set up in impound, and every car was measured immediately as it came off the track, someone could easily change the engine's programming as they ran their cool-down lap and came down the pit lane. It is that easy, and would be as difficult and time-consuming to discover as an engine teardown, requiring extensive and sophisticated examination of the software and electronics controlling the engine.There are not any loop holes with weight to horsepower ratios.
Even within a given "HP/Weight" class, there would still need to be additional parameters in any rule set to equalize cars relating to tire size and type, aero development, etc., that can make a HUGE difference in lap times between cars with equal HP/Weight. A car developing a lot of downforce is going to have an advantage in grip that can dominate any car with equal HP/Weight and no aero aids. I'm afraid there is no simple "one size fits all" rule that solves every problem.
This is a very curious statement to me, Kary.If you are caught cheating, as many of you do, you are out for a year.

TT