Cajundaddy wrote:Bottom line: PCA-GGR developed a classing system that really does create a pretty level playing field for most cars under most conditions.
Having not been involved with their program intimately, or knowing anyone who has, I will take this for granted. I'm sure they have their own group of "disgruntled" members who feel like their cars are unfairly treated, but perhaps it is smaller than usual. However, as I noted above, we did not adopt their total system, or maintain their dual classifications and mod penalties for TT vs. AX. A single car in their system runs in a different class for each venue. Not in ours. We are attempting a single classification system, adapting our old mod penalty scheme, without accounting for how differently certain mods can effect AX vs. TT performance. There are no less than 30 mod point penalties in their system which are different if you are classifying your car for AX vs. TT, spread out over the entire array of possible modifications--engine, suspension, weight removal, brakes, aero, etc.
A light car with a lot of grip is quick on an AX course.
This is true, but not the only factor, or the whole story, as I have mentioned. Let me illustrate my contentions with an example from my SCCA Solo experience in B-Modified class. The "car de jour" in that class is a D-Sportsracer, a car that is also road-raced in SCCA club and pro racing. In Solo (AX) racing, the dominant cars are the very narrow (48" track), short wheelbase (80"), obsolete flat-bottomed models from the past, outfitted with very specialized, low-speed aero aides (multi-element wings front and rear with foils optimized for ~40-70 mph speed range). The currently dominant road-racing DSR, the Stohr WF-1, has exactly the same HP/WT ratio as any DSR, but has a track width of 56", a wheelbase of 97", and a full ground effects underbody combined with a bi-plane rear wing with high-speed/low drag foils and a front splitter to develop downforce. Even though they might have the same power/weight ratio, even with equal tires, alignment settings and setups for each venue, the Solo DSR will absolutely destroy the Stohr on an AX course because it can negotiate tight turns, narrow gates, and multiple slalom cones without having to turn as much, carrying more speed everywhere by developing significant downforce without high speed. Conversely, the Stohr will be immensely faster on a road course, with greater stability from it's longer wheelbase, higher ultimate cornering speed from a wider track, plus lower drag and much more downforce at higher speed from its aero configuration. Even eliminating or equalizing the aero differences will still result in a several second margin for one over the other, depending on the venue. If you chose as an example the CSR and Formula Atlantic cars that are also eligible for B-Mod competition, the differences are even more extreme, because they are even bigger and wider than the Stohr. Many FA drivers have ended up boycotting B-Mod until SCCA does something to equalize performance with the smaller DSRs.
Granted, this is an extreme example, but it is indicative of the broadly different requirements for a fast AX car vs. a big track car. Size does matter--it is an oversimplification to say that "lightness and grip" are the only determining factors. Look at tire size as well. A very light car cannot even utilize a very wide tire on an autocross course--even with the softest of compounds, it might not be able to get enough heat in the tire in a single lap to optimize grip if the tire is too wide. But on a big track, with higher speeds and multiple laps, a larger tire can be advantageous. Then there's the issue of big brakes. On the big tracks, in multi-lap sessions, the last thing you want is to experience brake fade. Yet those big rotors and calipers are a handicap in AX, increasing weight and rotational inertia. I put big brakes on my old '73RS-look car after toasting the stock brakes at time trials, and I never suffered brake fade again, but I immediately lost a second on AX courses. I could go on, but it should be obvious that trying to use the same set of mod penalties to fairly classify a wide range of Porsche models in the same class for both AX and TT events is an exercise in futility, IMHO. We have a long way to go to make this scheme work well. In the meantime, we're supposed to be having fun with this racin' thang, so let's try to overlook the shortcomings in good spirits for the near term, and continue to improve the system we have adopted through cooperative discussion and objective analysis over the longer term.
TT