by Toymax » Thu Sep 22, 2011 2:31 pm
No comment doesn't mean I strongly disagree, just that I was focussed on answering the other part.
That said, I disagree with dropping the minimum size to 280. I can think of a couple of cars (at least in NSW) that would suffer at such a change. None of them are V8 supercars. Mine is just one example - it is not a small car, but certainly a cheap one (in terms of Sports Sedans, not in terms of my salary). V8 supercars run a few sets of new tyres per race meeting. I will be relying on second hand sets and will possibly buy a new set once a year, if I'm lucky. Those second hand sets will come from your S1 type cars, so obviously someone in my situation would like to be able to use them.
I don't know about suspension or chassis issues yet. Will let you know after the car is tested...
The message I was trying to convey with the comment in relation to my Corolla was that if I was still running it, I probably wouldn't have an opinion as it wouldn't affect me - the tyres were way smaller than 280 and so the rule wouldn't have penalised the Corolla.
What you have to be careful of when tyring to enable your smaller (cheaper?) cars to be more competitive is that you do just that - make them more competitive. You'll never succeed if the way you intend to do this is hobble every other car back to your level of performance. Instead you need to move forward with your own car and driver, working to make them faster, reliable and competitive. That's what happened with my Corolla, until it just couldn't go any faster without spending thousands, which was just not financially viable considering the minimal gain it would achieve. That's why I sold it and moved on to constructing something else - bigger and more powerful, sure, but within the rules as they exist and still pretty cheap (I keep using that term "cheap", but in reality it is not. It is a race car after all).