National Tour same weekend as NASA.
Might make the Pro but not happy about all street tire in the same class.
The National Tours and Pros finally offer a Street Tire (ok Road Tire) class, and all I hear is crickets chirping when I look at the registration list for the TX Tour and the TX Pro. You all need to sign up, and come on out. The Tours and Pros are fun events, feature better competition than you will typically find at local events, and we need to show the National Office that there is decent interest in these classes.
See you there....I hope!
National Tour same weekend as NASA.
Might make the Pro but not happy about all street tire in the same class.
M3 is always the answer.
It appears as though the National Office may be looking hard at changing the rules to run - drum roll please - STREET TIRES in STOCK class. What a concept. Personally (and this is just my opinion), smaller local Stock class fields may be because of allowing expensive R-comp rubber. Our "Tire" PAX class is pretty big, and maybe some of those folks would go to their appropriate Stock class if they could be competitive on true street tires (even the stickiest of 140-rated tires).
In "Chris' World" we'd have Stock running street tires; Street Tire running popular "streetable" mods and street tires; and Street Prepared running slightly more mods and R-comps.
Thoughts?
I am not sure I am in your world yet. I happen to like things like C5 Z06s on Hoosiers. I would probably like my car on Hoosiers too. I really see no reason why street tires on stock cars cannot be a separate class. Unfortunately, rather than presenting a street tire class as a separate entity, it is set up by the National Office (at least in my mind) as a "put-up or shut-up" proposition to those who do favor elimination of r-comps in stock. For this reason, I believe it is destined to be a short experiment. This class will make an interesting comparison to the National Street Tire Challenge format - which as you know allows pretty much anything on street tires PAX'd appropriately.
Using National events to gauge interest in stock cars on street tires is flawed. The people that attend National events are heavily into autocrossing and willing to spend the money on Hoosiers. The drivers that would prefer to have street tires in stock classes are not the people that attend National (or even Divisional) events. The only way to guage this is to do so on the local level, which is not likely to happen unless the national office decries that stock classes run street tires.
I agree with rpmchris, except that we should possobly leave R-comps to Super Stock.
The problem is, in my opinion, some folks at the national level appear to be ready to gauge interest in the street/stock philosophy based on attendance at National events. As with anything, there are good arguments on both sides of the issue. Setting this whole street/stock philosophy aside, my hope is that even if Road Tire participation is below "expectations", the National Office recognizes there is sufficient interest in the Road Tire Class to keep it alive as a class (as opposed to a philosophy) providing a place to play for folks like me.
I think about ½ of the guys that run R-comps in stock at the national level do so because they have to in order to be completive. The other half just like them, or they get a few sets free each year.
The last few years I have voted with my feet on R-comps, and have not done any national events. Now that I have a place to play on street tires I plan on doing a Tour and Pro this year.
The PAX based class is far from perfect, but I really don’t think we could expect them to drop R-comps without a test run, and making 9 new stock classes would be too many. At this point in time, I think PAX based classes are the best option.
Nonsense
1. The launch advantage from AWD over RWD isn't much. It's a few tenth which doesn't count for much on a 90 second course.
2. All of the AWD stock class cars aren't super competitive in their classes anyway.
Launch control does not make you launch ANY faster. It just makes you very consistent and takes away one thing to think about.
And actually OEM launch control might actually launch worse once you add super sticky tires and weird alignment settings into the mix.
Just imagine the bitching about RS3 availability and size choices if stock goes to 140+
Polished Turd Racing
Mick wrote: "I think Jerrett is the best autocrosser I have ever seen naked."
So, how long before Hoosier reclasses the A6 into a 140 tire?? :)
Polished Turd Racing
Mick wrote: "I think Jerrett is the best autocrosser I have ever seen naked."
I hope they leave the stock classes alone for now. It seems to me that the Street Tire/Road Tire pax classes are achieving the goal of providing a competitive venue for stock cars on street rubber. Actually, I think they are more interesting than open classes with only 2 or 3 cars. So long as they are using the pax index, it seems to be competitive.
For a lot of cars running on street tires would suck. An Elise, Corvette, Mustang, Camaro, M3, Evo, STI, etc. will just shred street tires and not be able to put down hp worth a damn. The ST* cars are modified extensively to maximize street tire grip/handling. For Miatas and other light cars its not too tough, but the bigger/heavier/high HP seem to give-up a lot on 140+ tires.
Polished Turd Racing
Mick wrote: "I think Jerrett is the best autocrosser I have ever seen naked."
You remember that time you drove JJs car? 90 seconds, it is the average length of most pro solos. In fact the last time we had a Texas sized pro solo it was around 120 seconds!
Four events is not enough data to draw a conclusion from, especially if the other NTSC courses were anything like the one in Texas.
The first time I ever drove on rcomps was in that car. It was eye opening!
I definitely agree that higher hp cars give up more on 140+ tires than lower hp cars. But I believe the issue of lighter cars having a special advantage on 140+ tires is more complicated:
In stock class bigger/heavier cars tend to be able to run much wider tires than small/light cars. But in street touring each class has a maximum limit on wheel and tire size. Regardless of whether you're in a heavier or lighter car, everyone is on the same 4 patches of rubber. This makes it very advantageous to have the lightest car in your class. Past that I don't see any special advantage light cars have on 140+ tires.