One option similar to the Zone 7 would be to give everyone a 205mm base tire front and rear and then for each mm over that you would add a point.
If you had 225 mm front and 245 mm rear tires, you would have 60 points (225-205=20 + 245-205=40 = 60 total points). Like Zone 7 it would be linear and without a maximum. Wider tires will cost you more points.
Most of the newer cars would have around 100+ points added to their base for their larger stock wheels.
Cajundaddy wrote:Believe me when I say I seriously appreciate all the hours of work that many including Tom have put into rating and classing our cars. I have been involved in rating and classing rules in other sports before and it is surely a difficult and thankless job. Thank you Tom et al for all of your efforts in this. I hope I can help to make your job easier.
Is it possible that we are over-thinking all this. Doesn't 98% of this game we play really come down to power/weight ratio, available grip, and driving skill, leaving 1% to car balance, 1% to aero in Time trials? It seems that most other sports car organizations are moving this way including Grand Am, ALMS, NASA, SCCA, (other than prototype classes which rely on very significant aero enhancements).
Just thought I'd throw that out there. Often the simplest solution is the most workable solution.
Greg Phillips wrote:Tom, one problem with this approach is that the Zone 7 base points do not include points for wheels/tires. These are added on in addition to the base points for wheels wider than 6 inches.![]()
"If the car has wheels that are wider then 12 in. total (one front wheel + one rear wheel), then additional wheel points will be assigned at a rate of 10 points per half inch above 12 in. Example, a car with 8 in. wide front wheels and 10 in. wide rear wheels has 6 in. (or twelve half-inches) of extra wheel width above 12 in., so it would be assigned 120 wheel points (10 points x 12 half-inches)."
This is linear and has no maximum, as opposed to our present "flawed" system that maxes out at 4 points for increased tire width. A 914 going from 165mm stock tire to a 325mm (or even larger) tire would have the same 4 points that a 911 SC going from 205 to a 255 tire would have.![]()
I think you need to look at this in your calculations. One option similar to the Zone 7 would be to give everyone a 205mm base tire front and rear and then for each mm over that you would add a point.
If you had 225 mm front and 245 mm rear tires, you would have 60 points (225-205=20 + 245-205=40 = 60 total points). Like Zone 7 it would be linear and without a maximum. Wider tires will cost you more points.![]()
Most of the newer cars would have around 100+ points added to their base for their larger stock wheels.
Greg
Greg Phillips wrote:I am not sure a hybrid system might not bring the worst of both worlds, rather than the best of both![]()
The attraction of GGR is using a full tested system. Trying to patch it without testing it might not be in our best interests.
Greg
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