The first example is exactly what I'm talking about ... one car, no tuning, everyone has the same car and has the same performance. It's all driver. The second one looks like fun and I would certainly enjoy it ... however, it would not be what I'm talking about because certain cars would fare better on certain tracks. Some folks would do the testing to find that out, others would get lucky, and the field would spread out during the race and would not give us the same kind of doorknob to doorknob racing that we had last night. Still fun. Just not ... insanely tight and fun.
EDIT: Ok, wait, now I get what you meant. The second one would fall under the modified category right? Touring Modified? If so, then yes, exactly. Some races would be Stock-UnModified and some would be Open-Modified. Yes. Precisely.
MX
Testing would be done by "us" (event organizers that is) beforehand to make sure that multiple cars perform closely enough, that way if necessary we can set specific limits for each car (e.g. car A is 300hp / 1100kg, car B is 275hp / 1000kg).Yup you're right with the edit, I mean it could be completely open tuning with say a limit on power / weight or an actual spec for each of the cars is posted (parts to be added / specific adjustable settings) that people are required to use. I guess you could call that a fixed-modified class, the cars are modified but to a fixed spec that we trust people to go by
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So we'd have say 3 tuning classes:
Fixed - stock cars with "Tuning Prohibited" lounge setting
Fixed-Modified - cars with parts added and specific settings but with self imposed "tuning prohibited" rule
Modified - cars with a general PP or hp/kg limit and open tuning
So with those two examples I used above the "Spec Miata" is a Fixed class race and the "STGT Touring Cup" would be Fixed-Modified class race. (I haven't actually tested those 3 cars, I just pulled 3 similar PP RM'd cars out of the air
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