Originally Posted by
reidhazelton
That's a symptom, not the root cause. You need to ask "why" multiple times until you get to a root. Why are cars parked in garages? Because it became too expensive.
Why is it too expensive? Run away rules in the early 2000s and 20-teens that failed to contain $20k shocks, trick gearboxes, Honda (say what you will, the inclusion of the Honda made car prices double, if not triple, for a top-level car, and they have yet to come back down), etc, which inturn pushed numbers down as the "back of the pack" entries left. Fewer entries, made higher costs which then pushed out the mid pack entries. I would counter that I don't think you can blame cost escalation on the Honda. The costs of maintenance of the Honda are pretty competitive as compared to a top-flight Kent. I would not disagree that the costs did escalate at the same time but that was also about the same time as the Mygale was introduced. I think the BOP between the two has been proven at this point so one can't use the excuse that the Kent isn't competitive.
Why were there runaway rules - SCCA is always a day late and a dollar short. SCCA is reactive, and not proactive. Very true; that is the nature of the SCCA rule system. As you know having been a member of the FSRAC, changes are normally made via member requests by the volunteer boards. if there were a full time rule czar the system could be pro-active, but even then I would wonder how well accepted those changes would be. Rules stability is the mantra, but with a formula it is always open to improvement and that usually costs money. The alternative is spec racing which is doing pretty well.
Why is SCCA reactive and not proactive like FRP? Large BoDs and governing bodies cannot pivot and move quickly. While there are diverse opinions that help bring fresh ideas forward, it also can be a roadblock when you get someone with a personal-interest agenda FRP certainly has the ability to be pro-active however they introduced radial tires and non-ferrous brake calipers both of which could be said to have escalated costs. Bob has done a great job, but even his numbers are lacking as to what the once were.
Simply blaming people who parked their cars is pointing the finger at the wrong people. It's on SCCA to incentivize and entice those owners back out - not shame them into it. Each parked their cars for certain reasons - often a multitude of reasons that made entering a race no longer worth the cost. That would be great but SCCA isn't really in the business of promoting individual classes. Obviously Enterprises does their own thing which is appealing to many. I point to B-Spec which was on the chopping block a few years ago. With the efforts of Frank Schwartz and David Daughtery that class pulled itself from the ashes. Ultimately it is up to each racer to get out and race which is what BS has done. I personally have been trying to do similar things with the assistance of a few fellow FC racers - we have seem some victories.
Further, the cost to enter one race a year when you factor in all the fixed costs is pretty astronomical. If you've been out for a few years you will need, at a minimum, new belts, helmet, flagtronics, rain light, fire system, HANS recert, physical, membership and club dues, maybe even a truck and trailer if you sold them. At a minimum, you're looking $3-$5,000 just to get the car current. Add in the entry fees that are nearly double the of of what it was when those who parked their cars did so 10 years ago. So telling people to "just go run one race a year" is financially nonsensical.
I have no solution, and as SCCA is constituted today I don't see a solution. Other than the spec tire in FF, I have seen no SCCA effort to contain costs. When I was on the CRB I cannot count the number of times someone said "what's $500 in the grand scheme of things and an annual racing budget?" One, it's $500. That's a day's take home pay for a lot of people who used to make up SCCA. Second, just because your racing budget is $80k/yr doesn't mean others are not scrimping by on $5,000/yr. Third, say "what's five hundred bucks" ten times and you just doubled to cost of a the person running the H prod car or the 84 Van Dieman. I can't say that I disagree. Good spec tires have (IMHO) certainly helped FF and FC however others would adamantly disagree. I can't off the top recall any requests other than the spec tire which have been aimed at reducing operating costs. At least as regards formula based classes those types of constraints are difficult to implement. The real cost increases for FF and FC appear to me to be related to entry fees, travel/lodging, and fuel.
It would be interesting to compare the cost escalation between FF and FC with SRF3 and FE2. I would "guess" that relatively speaking, FF and FC have seen a much lower rate of increase but I could be mistaken. Both SRF3 and FE2 have seen recent engine and gear box upgrades that came with a significant price tag. Despite the fact that the previous versions would be hung out to dry without any BOP adjustments there was very little complaining to be heard.
Reducing the opportunities for cars to run (FF, FV, F6) will only further reduce numbers. Sometimes you have to make an investment in a class for it to grow or re-build. How much track time did SCCA give FE/STU/STL/etc. when they first brought those classes out at the expense of other classes and look at what happened. SCCA is putting a ton of eggs in the SM basket and I worry that because those cars so easily cross over to literally any other racing organization, sooner or latter SCCA SM drivers will notice there are some really neat things happening at new orgs like GridLife and the various endurance racing groups. Then, what will SCCA be left with? FE?
In total, SCCA is toast I hope that isn't the case.
(RideMore - this is more a general post, not a post targeting you. Your post just got me thinking.)