Thanks for that info, Mark. If it's accurate, and I have no reason to think that you haven't studied the issue carefully, being a 944 owner, then the CC05 index might be closer than the CC06 index for 944 Spec class, since 452 and 463 are at the lower end of the point scale for CC06. Perhaps it should be set at a percentage of the difference between the CC05 and CC06 indexes, then? If you average 452 and 463, you get 457.5 points. That is only 15% into the CC06 point range of 450-499. The CC05 index is currently at 0.928 and the CC06 index is at 0.938. That is a difference of .010, 15% of which is .0015. Adding that to the .928 CC05 index would yield .9295 (possibly rounded to 0.930?) as a more accurate calculation of the proper 944 Spec index, in my mind, based on those facts.mrondeau wrote:A fully optimized 1988 944 Spec car that weighs 2400 pounds can point out at 463 points which would put it in CC06. A fully optimized 1988 924S Spec car that weighs 2400 pounds can point out at 452 points, which is still in CC06.

ChuckS wrote:The BRI is interesting and fun, but flawed. Always has been and always will be. Nature of the beast.
I believe this is the right answer to better align the classes as well as BRI.

Jad wrote:I think the BRI is a very fun system and a good benchmark. If you are not generally near the top quarter, it is driver or car, not the classification. The system may not be accurate to a tenth of a second, but if you are several seconds off, look to see how optimized the car is, tire condition and as a very last resort, check the mirror and you will find the problem. As far as I can tell, the system does a pretty good job of telling you about which range you place as far as driver skill within the club, I do not think it tells you whether you were better than the guy you beat by a tenth in the BRI, but the car classification are not that accurate either.
The only completely accurate system is best time wins, and while it is accurate, it is a long way from fair for lots of reasons.
When you really think you have optimized the car and track, let Eric K or Mark R drive your car for a few laps and see if maybe you didn't leave a coule of seconds out there...
The index will be perfectly fair about the time Yugos start dominating CC16 at Big Willow. In other words, never.
Until then, enjoy it for what it is for, humor and BS-ing.
pecivil wrote:There is only 1 way to "take the car out of the equation" when trying to determine driver skill. it is putting everyone in the exact same car, letting everyone get equal seat time, and have a competition in similar conditions. We all know this is impossible to do in practice pretty much. BMW club has a weekend where all the class winners on Saturday then have a "runoff" on Sunday where they all run in a "mystery" car that is only revealed right before the runs. I am not even sure if that really does find the best driver, but it is closer.
I hope I am not being "ad nauseum" about this subject. My intention, as stated previously, is to keep improving the index or just get rid of it completely. Parsing your comments, I am putting you on the side of keeping it, from the "people like it" part. Yes, it is unofficial, just for fun, and imperfect, but is that a good reason to quit trying to improve it? The accuracy may be suspect, but why not take logical steps to make it better, if we can determine what those might be?At any rate, trying to optimize and data point the BRI is really just fooling yourself that it actually means something more than "humor and BS-ing" as Dave so eloquently puts it. The fact that the same people popup on the top 10 times list and the BRI list shows some correlation, but that does not make it "accurate" by any means. We all know who the good drivers are by looking at the raw times, right? People like it so by all means keep it, but dont try to play numbers "ad nauseum" to make it "accurate" since we all seem to agree it can never be that.
I'm glad you said "almost always" about the Top 10 list, because there are definitely people driving slower cars who NEVER get on that list and are nonetheless great drivers. Two that come to my mind immediately are Gary Burch and Jess Osterberg. I don't think I have ever seen either one of them in the top 10 on raw time, but they drive the wheels off their relatively underpowered, "under-tired" cars at every event and can often get into the top 10 (or even win) on indexed time. These are the kind of drivers the index was created for, and I think it gives an added dimension of fun to our events. From what I've heard so far, there is plenty of skepticism (or cynicism) about the BRI out there, but no one has come out and just said "I hate it, it's a waste of time, we should $hit-can it!" If anyone does feel that way, go ahead and say it--I can respect that. But if we aren't going to do away with it, we should keep improving it or it will only become more irrelevant and inaccurate. That doesn't serve anyone, whether you like the BRI or not.I look to the Top 10 list to compare myself too. If I am on it I had a good day, if I am not I didnt. Easy. The best drivers in our chapter are almost always on that list and that is the way to judge driver skill IMHO because it only involves actual times, irrespective of class or BRI.

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