mrondeau wrote:If we leave the points progression the way it is, future P-cars will have an available progression to go to with a point spread that keeps them from being lumped together. We haven't seen any highly modified 997's & 987's yet. Once we do, the points could add up quickly.
I thought about this possibility, and wondered about how the heck anybody could end up with a car with over 1200 points in CC01. So just for grins and giggles, I pointed out a 2008 997 Carrera that had EVERY possible mod done to it to make it the equivalent of the 997 Cup, short of transplanting the $40K Cup motor and $25K sequential box into it (which would be impractical, since it would be cheaper to just buy the used Cup car instead). This included adding Cup car slicks, increasing the track to widebody specs, LSD and short gears, brake upgrade, every possible suspension upgrade (shocks, springs, sways, monoballs), adding aero, and then stripping out 495 lbs. from the car to bring it down to Cup weight. This totaled out to 998 points, which would be CC04 class under our 2012 rules. Unless you started with a GT2 or Carrera GT with 850 base points and did mods to it that no rational owner would ever consider, I don't really see how you could get to 1200+ points and have to run in CC01.
CC01 to CC05 are going to be more sparse due to the smaller number of extremely modified cars running in each class.
My contention is that we are unlikely to see ANY cars correctly classed at higher than 1100 points. My justification for lowering the point threshold for CC01 to 1000+ is based on the premise that the most highly modded cars we would normally see at our events would not be any higher than this, even the cars that ran in our old AR2 class. If people are choosing to run CC01 because they don't want to be bothered with figuring out their actual point count (or are just running away from Jad's class

), that is another story. As part of this exercise, I pointed out an actual 2008 997 Cup as well (in case we were to allow such an "exotic" car to run in CC class instead of X) and it came out at 1207, due to the 209 pt. penalty for the increased HP of the Cup engine over the 997 C2, and this assumes that the listed 2530 lb. weight is not a dry weight but wet, with full fuel as our rule allows. Even if it is a wet weight, with 20 lbs. of ballast it would be under 1200 points. If we actually had some cars like this show up, maybe we would need to raise the maximum threshold, but more likely, it would just make the people who are running in CC01 by choice reconsider their classing calculation (or lack thereof).
I'm not sure how many cars are as modified as the fire breathing dragon that will be making it's debut at Chuckwalla.

It isn't all that "fire-breathing" or even modded as much as a lot of cars we see. If it makes it to Chuckwalla, it will actually be in X class and putt-putting around the track in the slowest group, pointing people by while short-shifting to break in a newly rebuilt engine, not running for time on Sunday. But if it was pointed-out under the current TT rules, starting as a base '91 C2, it comes in at under 901 points and would run in CC05 class, even using Cup slicks or 275/315 Hoosiers. I think that's about right, as it should have similar performance to Bob Brand's new car, and he is listed in CC05. If it had a stock '91 964 3.6L engine in it instead of a modded 3.8, it could lose 160 points and be in CC06 with Jad. Of course, the "exotic" VIN it started life with prevents running in any CC class at the moment.
TT