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Re: Vintage Racing Rules and rose colored glasses

To: <S800Racer@aol.com>, <dwaite@reboxx.com>, <vintage-race@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: Vintage Racing Rules and rose colored glasses
From: "Peter van Rossum" <peterv@tri-county.main.nc.us>
Date: Wed, 28 Mar 2001 19:34:30 -0500
I like the Brilliant mechanic part not that I cheat or any of that stuff.
CRAZY PETE

----- Original Message -----
From: <S800Racer@aol.com>
To: <dwaite@reboxx.com>; <vintage-race@autox.team.net>
Sent: Wednesday, March 28, 2001 4:22 PM
Subject: Re: Vintage Racing Rules and rose colored glasses


> In a message dated 3/28/01 10:45:56 AM, dwaite@reboxx.com writes:
>
> << I certainly don't disagree with having rules and trying to keep things
in
> check but all was not kosher in the good old days and I think folks should
> understand that. >>
>
>     Everyone knows that cheating is nothing new and as much a part of
racing
> as rubber and gasoline.  One of the differences from the 'good old days'
and
> vintage racing is that in the old days, there was more of a purpose for
> cheating.  When these cars were new, they went racing with the intention
to
> win the race or their class.
>     But now, the purpose is supposed to be a bit different.  The purpose
and
> focus now is supposed to be fun/preservation/exhibition.  If you cheated
to
> win back then, you were using creative engineering to outrun the
competition
> for money or points.  If you cheat to win in vintage racing, you're doing
it
> because your ego can't cope with your lack of talent or a historically
slow
> car.
>     I also don't buy the common excuse that "everyone ran with (insert
your
> favorite cheater part) on their cars in the old days"  Sure, some guys
did.
> But don't try to tell me that blatantly illegal cars were winning SCCA
> Nationals and not getting protested.  The good and fast cars were NOT
running
> incorrect cylinder heads, brakes, carbs, etc., etc.  They were primarily
well
> prepared and well driven machines that earned their way to the front of
the
> grid LEGALLY.  Any cheating on these cars had to be very clever indeed not
to
> get spotted and protested.  (Of course, some of these cars were prepared
by
> very clever and brilliant mechanics.)
>     Since where we finish in a vintage race is less important than it
would
> have been in our cars heyday, we should have a higher standard of car
> preparation in terms of legality.  Part of the thrill of vintage racing is
> knowing (if your car is period correct) that what you are doing is really
> like it was in the old days - that you are racing a true vintage or
historic
> car.
>
>     Doug Meis

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