DIRTRACER - i am under the impression that you know all so let me ask again.
Where did I say that? I know more than most who haven't been racing one for the most part, and have some experience with the coil cars you believe are the devil.
How much do the current modifieds cost? (ex. engine & chassis) If you don't actually know this the extra class means nothing.
Or we do know, but it is a pointless argument with too many variables. If someone makes a compact out of a bugatti somehow, does that mean it costs 1.2 million to race the compacts? If you want an actual price range, UMP modifieds are out there that ranged $3,500 to a $$50,000 - $60,000 budget. Speed costs money, how fast do you want to go? That fact isn't exclusive to modifieds or stock cars, it's all of racing. The effective restriction with my rule ideas is the junk GM cast iron intake, and a 2 barrel on a 23 degree motor. Sure there are parts that work well with these rules, but it is absolutely restricting 200-300 horsepower off the top mods with this rule package. That in itself saves racers a lot of money. The fact the current stock guys can move all of their existing drivetrain and fuel system into a UMP mod saves racers money. The fact that with a change of intake and carb, most of the lesser funded mod teams could join makes them more competitive on the same budget they were already spending. Can I guarantee no one is going to show up with a 2010 Shaw with a 430sbc? No, but I don't see any Bugatti's in the compact field either. With the restriction mentioned, the benefit to cost ratio gets pretty small quickly.
Also the rule change for the stock rear suspension wasn't to slow you down it was to maintain cost control. (right or not rules are rules so get over the fact that you had to spend more money)(if you didn't like spending money you would just watch racing instead of driving)
Nice, so now I just enjoy spending the money? Maybe I just love the racing and look at it as a passion, or addiction I must feed? Either way, I don't get your point on how I ought to just like it. That's an old dead subject, and I don't blame Lima for the rule addendum, they weren't the ones with their heads in the sand. All the cars you see pulling wheelies? Yup, leaf springs. I know of 2-3 other cars with coil rears, none of us three wheel. The point is their rule wasn't to control costs, it was a knee-jerk reaction to someone's inquiry without having a clue what was exactly out there, and what the cause or extent of the problem actually is. It's kinda like having 40 holes in the bottom of the boat, sticking gum over one and calling it fixed.
In your post you say no one has 4 link and then you go right into saying the leafs beat 4 links all the time???? i confused
No, I said bar cars. 2 links, 3 links, 4 bar, z-link, and swingarm are all "bar cars". There were some fast ones at eldora, but leaf springs dominating yet again. Lima and Waynesfield have had a total of three winners this year. All three on leaf springs. I actually couldn't tell you how many years it's been since a bar car won at Lima or waynesfield? I'm fast on a heavy track, but still remain winless....sigh.
Also if 4 link isn't better then why does anyone do it at all, include mods?
Works great in those cars, not so much on a stocker. They're plain and simple different cars. I've had my thoughts that it just isn't effective with the extra weight you have to transfer, different scale percentages? (I'd be WAY over weight to get to mod percentages). Others I've chatted with said they think the rear steer that is inherent in bar cars just doesn't work with stocks for whatever reason. I don't have the specific cause narrowed down, but on the short tracks at least - they haven't proven to be ANY advantage.
Hoosiers cost more new and wear out faster, sure you can get them used but I bet people who buy new run better, hence other have to buy new to compete.
I disagree that they cost more "new", and I haven't bought a new one in over a year (used stock was scarce beginning of last season). Wear? Hasn't been the LEAST bit of problem for us. DOT tires chunk, and I am not comfortable jumping a cushion at 100mph on tires designed for the tow rig truck. Again, these are my personal experiences with the cars, I've ran both. Have you?
Each stretch of the original stock rules cost more money and evolves the class. I guess what I am saying is deal with it or buy a mod because a new class like what you speak of is just not going to happen.
Conversely, each time a rule is "reeled back" it costs racers money too. What's the result? A net gain of zero. Those who did their homework and were fast before continue to be fast. Those who struggled will continued to struggle.
Edited by Dirtracer48, 17 July 2012 - 02:23 AM.