Circuit_Motorsports said:
Howabout dropping safety related stuff from the budget? Lights, gauges, roll bars, etc.?
This is the crux of the problem for me next year. Had the Spousal Unit's vacation not interfered I would be preparing The Barbed Wire Special for this year's festivities instead of sitting here in front of the computer. As a several others have intimated, a Challenge car unless you bring it back year after year is pretty much a one-trick pony. Yes, I understand the car can be returned to street duty but that's not what I got the car for and missing The Challenge this year means moving everything a year to the right. I did not want to build a non-competitive car, drive it 2700 miles for a coupla days of autocross and concours, and drive it back 2700 miles without having a chance of placing well.
I love cars, I love hanging out with others who share my mania and I love good competition. I figured the build for this along with the trip to and from Florida from California was going to run about 5 grand. I don't spend that kind of money to not know I'm going to have a chance at the box. This how I've been in all of my competitive activities: Kart racing, motorcycle racing, bicycle racing, long distance motorcycle rallying, etc. First and foremost, I wanna have fun. Having a chance to win is part of that fun.
I know that Lemons cars get an automatic pass into The Challenge and I could build The Barbed Wire Special into one but the cage becomes a budget item unless I run the Lemons drive train. The Lemons build will be about 150hp below The Challenge build. A non-competitive build. If I lived in Florida, or southern Georgia, this wouldn't be a big deal and I'd show up for E36 M3s and giggles. Driving to and from California is an entirely different kettle of fish.
Here was the plan:
1. Do a good build for The Challenge that will do well. I don't think it would be a winner but from what I've read of previous events it would've been on the box assuming we didn't run into the unforeseen issues that plague these sorts of things. We all know about assume. Drive there and back; enjoy the adventure and meeting a whole host of folks who enjoy the same E36 M3 I do. Kicking butt, while important is not the primary goal. Having fun is.
2. Either turn it into a Lemons car OR take the build to the next level and enter it into One Lap. Either build requires a full cage; Lemons by rule and One Lap by common sense. Any car that can go 160mph on a closed course needs a full cage. Any cage I would build will not be removable so I would not be able to do The Challenge with this car. Back to the drawing board...
3. If the car runs as well as I expect, I was hoping to leave it in Indiana and fly back a coupla weeks later for a drive to Virginia and the UTCC. I thought this would certainly cap The Barbed Wire Special's career as a budget build racecar.
I was actually going to bring up the roll cage as a budget item to The Powers That Be in person because I don't understand why it is viewed as a performance enhancement in The Challenge and I don't see why TPTB would restrict us from including safety equipment from a motorsports event. In the first case, while the cage may improve Autocross performance, 150 pounds of steel is going to definitely slow the car down in the drags. Not being able to return next year with a competitive car is a real bummer for me. That is the key in this diatribe: Me. I have no idea how many others have brought this up but I can see how the cage as a budget item has a real impact on participation. It does in my case.
I see Patrick's response to this so perhaps this has been brought up before? I'll get the popcorn started.