Mark Garriott wrote: Weight is weight and horsepower is horsepower. And, it all comes down to pounds per horsepower -- which is the primary determinant for classification. There should not be 2 scales -- one for the weight Porsche bestowed upon the stock car, and another for weight removed from the car by the owner.
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Why is the additional penalty for weight removed by me MORE THAN DOUBLE the penalty for weight removed by the factory? The cars have the same power-to-weight ratio after the modification.
OK, now I understand what you're saying, Mark, and it is basically the same idea that Greg is proposing. You are talking about "equity" rather than "compatibility," which threw me at first. It is perfectly "compatible" with our goal of leveling cars that our rules contain a provision for penalizing weight reduction from stock, but the question is whether our existing formula is "equitable," and I agree with you that it isn't, for a number of reasons. What Greg has said is this:
Greg Phillips wrote: For the weight points, decreasing the weight would only change the PW or power to weight ratio, so the difference between the basepoints and the greater points with a better PW number would be your weight points penalty.
The devil is in the details in writing this kind of rule, though. The problem I see with Greg's proposal above is that it relates the weight point reduction to the difference between your new PW ratio (after weight removal) and the
assigned base points for your car, not with the original "stock" PW ratio. This ignores the adjustments for age and tire width that are also included in the base point calculation, unfairly penalizing older cars, which receive a reduction in base points based on age and "design and performance advantages inherent to models that were engineered to utilize wider wheels" (which could also be expressed as "engineering advances in suspension/chassis design in later model cars"). The penalty should be calculated by comparing stock PW ratio and modified PW ratio only (unrelated to base points), IMHO, and be written in a way that is clear and easy to calculate. This is easier to say than to do. Nevertheless, I would suggest a proposal something like this (using your example of a Cayman S):
Existing rule:X. Weight of the car below the base car curb weight:
The first 50 pound reduction in weight is zero points, beyond that points are determined by multiplying the reduction in weight by .40 and rounding up to the nearest multiple of 10.
Example:
Decrease in weight: 85 pounds
85-50 = 35
35 x .40 = 14, rounded to 20 points.
Curb weight is defined as the weight of the base car as listed in the chart in Section XVIII Appendix C. If the chart gives a weight range, for purposes of this section, the lowest weight should be used. For weighing, the car should be ready to drive with all fluids (gas, oil, etc) full, tools, spare tire, jack, etc in the car but no driver. These items do not have to be in the car or fluids full while participating in the event. Anything removed for purposes of Section XIII Part M may be replaced and all fluids may be topped off, as needed, before weighing.
Proposed new rule:X. Weight of the car below the base car curb weight:
Penalty points are determined by calculating the difference in power to weight ratio achieved by the removal of weight according to the following formula:
[4000 / (ModifiedW/P)] - [4000 / (StockW/P)]
"StockW" is defined as the curb weight of the base car as listed in the chart in Section XVIII Appendix C. "P" equals the Horse Power for the base car as listed in the same chart. "ModifiedW" is the weight of the car as measured after modification. For weighing, the car should be ready to drive with all fluids (gas, oil, etc) full, tools, spare tire, jack, etc in the car but no driver. These items do not have to be in the car or fluids full while participating in the event. A discrepancy of 50 lbs. in total car weight is allowed to account for differences in scale weight calibration at varying locations.
Example:
165 lbs. have been removed from a 2010 Cayman S (determined by weighing the car per procedures above and comparing it to the listed Curb weight). The penalty points for this modification would be:
[4000 / (2811 / 320)] - [4000 / (2976 / 320)]
resolved as:
(4000 / 8.78) - (4000 / 9.3)
or
(455 - 430) = 25 point weight modification penaltyThis matches your example exactly, Mark. I would note also that this does not address which figures are finally adopted as the proper "Curb weight" for the appendix chart, the existing "PCNA table" or owner's manual data or a revised table of our own making, nor does it address the question of whether the weights should be taken including driver, which I would prefer. I also thought the statement:
"Anything removed for purposes of Section XIII Part M may be replaced and all fluids may be topped off, as needed, before weighing" was redundant, so I left it out. The "free 50 lb. allowance" does not enter into the calculation directly, but is retained indirectly as a "slush" factor. My experience has been that scales commonly used to weigh a 2-3,000 lb. car can easily have a tolerance of +/- 50 lbs. as far as accuracy is concerned. Nobody should get bit in the butt because the scale they used was reading heavy by 50 lbs. That's only a 2% error in a 2500 lb. car. I didn't put any language in regarding "rounding up or down" or how many decimal points the figures should be carried out to in making the calculation, but this isn't rocket science--it should be close enough for our purposes.
Comments, criticisms, and suggestions welcome.
TT