mattm
Senior Member
- First Name
- Matt
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2023
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 60
- Reaction score
- 35
- Location
- Connecticut
- Car(s)
- Acura ITS, BMW 1M Coupe
Or lost by 0.010 (BT, DT).
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Rarely do I get the satisfaction of interfacing directly with the "powers-that-be" that I am prone to ranting on about. It is both an honor and a privilege! And I sincerely hope you don't take this personally- I get that you are doing this for nothing, and it is likely a mostly thankless job... but that doesn't mean I can't complain about it! I do appreciate you taking the time to respond though, and I will certainly investigate the links you provided.Firstly, I am currently a member of the committee for SCCA that classes cars in the Street category. Each category (Street, Street Touring, Street Prepared, etc) has its own classing committee. Its 100% volunteer and eats up many hours of my free time per month. We get nothing for it. I am serving my 7th and final year.
With that said - in the Street category we often 'get out ahead' and class a new car before we get a letter from a member asking for it. However, that's rare. The membership is usually more anxious than the committee is! And a car cannot be classed based on speculation of the specifications. It often gets classed when enough journalists (YouTube or print) have gotten to drive them or even until they hit showroom floors.
If a precedent was set where each committee had to class EVERY new car/trim without getting a letter, there would be no volunteers. Who wants to look up the specs on a Nissan Versa?!?! No one will likely ever want to drive one competitively. So why bother? Wait until someone is insane enough to want to drive it at a National-level autocross event and they can write a letter asking for it to be classed.
Additionally, any 2024 model year cars are not officially classed until the 2023 Solo National Championships are complete. That way no one wins a National Championship just because they won the wait-list battle at the dealership.
With ALL of that said - the Type S was clearly not on a lot of members radar. I had to submit a letter to my own committee asking for it to be classed in the Street Category! And it appears no one submitted a letter to the Street Touring Committee asking it to be classed there. Keep in mind it the FL5 is in STU so there is no reason for them to place the DE5 anyplace else. And FWD cars don't normally do well in STU as you are up against some AWD and RWD platforms.
If competing locally and for fun - no need to read the whole rule book! Keep in mind Solo Nationals has 1500 competitors dedicating an entire year to competing at Nationals. Classes have been won by 0.001 of a second over the course of 2 days on 2 different courses. Without strict rules, there would be a lot of cheating and anarchy.
There are plenty of good guides online. This one seems decent: https://www.scca-classifier.com/a/index.html as well as: https://www.wny-scca.com/car-classing-guide/
As for the rest of the rules, and the crazy competition- I totally get it. It's what makes competing at that level fun for the folks that are in the hunt for championships... but also intimidating to newbs and casuals.Additionally, any 2024 model year cars are not officially classed until the 2023 Solo National Championships are complete. That way no one wins a National Championship just because they won the wait-list battle at the dealership.
But if it does get classed sooner, them it can compete, correct? SAC and SEB can approve a car for clarification.Haha, all good. 7+ years on the committee has made me grow some thick skin! I can take it!!
The best thing about SCCA is that most region's have a registration team that knows the rules/classes fairly well. If the region does things right, they will allow you to pre-register with class of "UNK" and will figure it out when you check-in on-site. I do it unofficially for my local region. I get a text saying 'Sam - what class is a Geo Metro in with 15x8 wheels and different camshafts". I almost always can get the dart close to the bullseye with that type of info! And every region has someone similar to me.
Correct. Rarely done if its a brand new car/model. I believe the 2015 WRX hit showrooms in July and was made eligible to complete at 2014 Nationals and someone almost won in one.But if it does get classed sooner, them it can compete, correct? SAC and SEB can approve a car for clarification.
I got my Type-S about a month ago and will be jumping in the B-Street waters full blast. Ordered my wheels (18x9.5 ET58 Apex EC-7) and tires (V730 in 275/35-18) on Wednesday.... I have left-over sway bars from when I campaigned my 10th/11th gen Civics (had an '18 Si, '20 Sport Hatch and '22 Si). I will likely start the year with my RV6 rear bar as its far less noisy than my Karcepts bar.
I run a lot Nationally so will be out and about in Pro/Tour events in the midwest. As well as local events in the Milwaukee/Chicago area.
Not yet. My first event isn't until the first weekend in May.Any updates on how you like the performance of your wheel and tire setup? I've been looking at nearly the exact same for Autocross this season. You can go wider but 275/35r18 seems to offer the best tire choices and is slightly taller which might benefit our gearing.
Were you doing the pedal dance before each run? I ask because the car will NOT rotate unless you do. I didn't have issue rotating (within reason for a FWD car) stock, but have the R6 RSB going on next week to make it a little easier, and as per above likely will be required when I get the RT660s on.Had my first session with my ITS last Sunday. I had sooo much fun. There are so much thing to explore and learn! I felt it was very hard to rotate the car (purly stock), 2nd gear all through the course and no boost. But man it is fun. Just signed up for another one for this weekend looking for more fun!
Yeah I failed to do the pedal dances, that might be part of the reason. I am also trying to be conservative for my first dayWere you doing the pedal dance before each run? I ask because the car will NOT rotate unless you do. I didn't have issue rotating (within reason for a FWD car) stock, but have the R6 RSB going on next week to make it a little easier, and as per above likely will be required when I get the RT660s on.
That is 100% the reason. You may find it annoying at first but it literally takes 10 seconds and becomes muscle memory by your 3rd run.Yeah I failed to do the pedal dances, that might be part of the reason. I am also trying to be conservative for my first day
Got it, I will try to practice doing that XDThat is 100% the reason. You may find it annoying at first but it literally takes 10 seconds and becomes muscle memory by your 3rd run.
You can't drive this thing in anger without the nannies turned off.