Hi all,
Been buried in shoulder surgery and house stuff, so finally had a chance to read through this. A few thoughts:
While I do know a fair amount about cars, I am definitely not a mechanic and I don't know much about our engines and what it takes to keep them healthy. We have been running the same engine since we got the car, and other than belts and some new rod bearings and occasionally remembering to change the oil, plugs and clean the air filter, it has run just fine. Should it go "poof", then I will have more to say about replacement options. I just want to caution that what we don't want to happen is tell a new racer that the 944 they just built is now going to need to have the engine pulled so higher compression pistons and sleeving has to occur just to be competitive. Yes, we have a hp and tq cap, but HOW the power is delivered is more important than how much is delivered when you have a Dyno cap. We start tinkering with compression ratios and deck heights, and it could end up being a slippery and expensive slope. Again, 700 bucks here, 800 there, and people park their cars. I know I speak as someone who isn't replacing motors regularly, so I am not as sensitive to this issue, but money is money and there seems to be a camp on here that believes there are enough parts out there to repair engines without additional aftermarket expenses.
Regarding the battery, we ran the last 4 years with a big, heavy Bosch battery living in the stock location, and it didn't seem to matter on our results. Finally, on a whim, I decided to replace it with a 15lb UHV battery over the summer, again in the stock location. Wasn't needed, but thought I would save some weight I gained with the fire system install as my usual post-race weight was hovering around 2660. My point is the stock battery location works fine and my passenger floor is already filled with a fire suppression system, a data collection module and a cool suit cooler. There isn't room for a battery and I don't think it would add any advantage. So my vote is to keep it as is. BTW, my UTV battery was cheaper than a group 24.
As for camber/caster plates, I agree with Tom A that, in itself, having the plates similar or exactly as he runs, doesn't guarantee anything. I think there needs to be a standard, but again mandating a certain plate means added cost to racers that translates to less money to actually go racing. We don't use camber/caster combination plates, some people do. It hasn't seem to had a dramatic impact on the results either way.
I use stock phone dials with a late offset, and I can still find wheels at a decent price no problem, and they are more rare than cookies. As much as I love fancy wheels, again it's an added cost.
If you sense a theme here, I am very sensitive to anything that will increase the cost of running these cars. They are already expensive enough to run (ask my wife), and the best thing I love about this series besides the great people who are associated with it is the tight,fun, competitive and clean nature of it. So I think we need to ask ourselves with every rule change we contemplate that involves additional cost for the racer in our series: Will what we change IMPROVE the nature of our racing environment and actually make it better, more competitive, and more satisfying for ALL that are on track? If so, then go for it. If not, I say leave it as is and let people use the money they would have spent on these adds or mandated changes and instead use it for entry fees so we actually have decent fields at every race weekend.
Just my 2 cents.
BTW, how many pints of blood does one need to give to afford the fuel bill to go the 2000 miles one-way to Mid Ohio next Fall? Asking for a friend.