I certainly appreciate the thought and effort at bringing in sponsors and lowering the cost of racing, but I personally don't think that a spec brake pad is the right place to pursue this, for a few reasons:
- Different people have different preferences in what they look for in a pad - torque build-up, release, 'feel', cost, etc. I don't think that a brake pad compound (or even manufacturer across all of their offerings) can be a 'one size fits all' situation. For example, a lot of guys swear by Hawk Blues, but I personally can't stand them.
- For somebody just starting out, telling them that they have to run one particular brake pad can just add to the initial cost of a build. Whereas before it would be possible to get by for your first few events on a lower-cost pad (even a street compound could work with these cars, for a while, just to get you out on track), we would now be telling someone that they had to add to their initial build cost in order to be 'in-spec'.
- Our cars are so ridiculously easy on brake pads that this isn't something that we really have to replace that often, which minimizes the long-term cost savings of something like this.
Again, I appreciate the effort to think beyond our current sponsors and lower the cost, even though I'm not personally in favor of this particular idea.