by Steve Holmes » Sun Aug 24, 2014 1:04 am
Mike, you're a classic case of the right guy with the wrong car. By that I mean, you understand historic car racing, building a period correct car, and going historic racing for all the right reasons. Unfortunately, you're in love with a model of car that is a production sports car, in a country that has very little motorsport history for such cars, and as such, doesn't yet have the drive needed to create a dedicated class for such cars. Unfortunately for you, NZ is very much sedan racing lop-sided.
Dale is correct. HMC and the U3 saloon groups are for sedan cars, and not production sports cars. The reason for this is these groups have been created to replicate history. Back in period, saloon cars raced against saloon cars. And production sports cars raced against production sports cars. And the two rarely ever came together.
You are correct in that at some events the two did race on the same track at the same time. Daytona 24 Hours, Sebring 12 Hours, and Le Mans are classic examples. But in historic racing events around the world, generally the two groups are separated, because thats how they raced in period.
You're a classic Datsun guy. As you know, Datsun were trying to establish themselves in the US market in the late 1960s and early '70s, and they used motorsport to help achieve this. They contracted Pete Brock's BRE group to race cars in both sedan racing and production sports car racing. They ran Datsun 510s in the SCCA Trans-Am sedan racing 2.5 litre class, and Datsun 240Zs in B and C/Production sports car racing. But the 240zs weren't allowed to race with the Trans-Am cars, because they were a sports car.
In the US and Australia, and even in NZ, Porsche 911s were briefly considered sedan cars, and were allowed to race with the sedans. But even this was borderline, and the Porsches were kicked out of the Trans-Am after 1969, and the Australian Touring Car Championship after 1971. In NZ, a Porsche raced in the 1972 NZ Saloon Car Championship in 1972, but was thus sent away following that season, and was consistently protested by the other teams throughout. A Porsche also raced for a season in the Castrol GTX production series, but likewise was eventually banned. Essentially, the 911 was considered a production sports car, but their brief inclusion in sedan racing in period means they're often accepted into historic sedan grids today. But this was the exception, rather than the rule. Generally, sedans and sports cars had their own separate races and championships.
I could be wrong about this, but its my understanding its the cabin size that dictates whether its considered a sedan or sports car?
At the Australian Muscle Car Masters in a couple of weeks, CAMS Historic Group S will be competing. This is a dedicated class for production sports cars, and combines everything from 240Zs, to Shelby Cobras, Corvettes, Lotus Elans, MGs, De Tomaso Panteras, etc, that, in period, would have raced together. But Group S runs separately from Group Na/Nb/Nc Historic Touring Cars. Historic racing is about replicating history. It sucks, and it would be great to find a solution, but you can't change history unfortunately.
If you allow a 240Z to run with the saloons, you also have to allow Corvettes, TVR Griffiths, and other potentially very fast production sports cars as well, and this will only drive away the saloon car people and spread the field out. Its not period correct, and would cause more problems than it would solve.
An interesting side-note regarding this. We have one guy joining HMC/Under 3, who is a Nissan 300Z nut. He owns a collection of these cars, and has spent plenty of dosh on them. But he also really likes the idea of racing a period correct car, with like-minded enthusiasts. So he bought himself a Datsun 240K, a rare early Japanese sedan that is eligible to run, raced in period, and will be period correct. Food for thought?
Otherwise, wouldn't it be great to see a group established for period correct production sports cars. Now thats something that really has some potential.
Mike, you're a classic case of the right guy with the wrong car. By that I mean, you understand historic car racing, building a period correct car, and going historic racing for all the right reasons. Unfortunately, you're in love with a model of car that is a production sports car, in a country that has very little motorsport history for such cars, and as such, doesn't yet have the drive needed to create a dedicated class for such cars. Unfortunately for you, NZ is very much sedan racing lop-sided.
Dale is correct. HMC and the U3 saloon groups are for sedan cars, and not production sports cars. The reason for this is these groups have been created to replicate history. Back in period, saloon cars raced against saloon cars. And production sports cars raced against production sports cars. And the two rarely ever came together.
You are correct in that at some events the two did race on the same track at the same time. Daytona 24 Hours, Sebring 12 Hours, and Le Mans are classic examples. But in historic racing events around the world, generally the two groups are separated, because thats how they raced in period.
You're a classic Datsun guy. As you know, Datsun were trying to establish themselves in the US market in the late 1960s and early '70s, and they used motorsport to help achieve this. They contracted Pete Brock's BRE group to race cars in both sedan racing and production sports car racing. They ran Datsun 510s in the SCCA Trans-Am sedan racing 2.5 litre class, and Datsun 240Zs in B and C/Production sports car racing. But the 240zs weren't allowed to race with the Trans-Am cars, because they were a sports car.
In the US and Australia, and even in NZ, Porsche 911s were briefly considered sedan cars, and were allowed to race with the sedans. But even this was borderline, and the Porsches were kicked out of the Trans-Am after 1969, and the Australian Touring Car Championship after 1971. In NZ, a Porsche raced in the 1972 NZ Saloon Car Championship in 1972, but was thus sent away following that season, and was consistently protested by the other teams throughout. A Porsche also raced for a season in the Castrol GTX production series, but likewise was eventually banned. Essentially, the 911 was considered a production sports car, but their brief inclusion in sedan racing in period means they're often accepted into historic sedan grids today. But this was the exception, rather than the rule. Generally, sedans and sports cars had their own separate races and championships.
I could be wrong about this, but its my understanding its the cabin size that dictates whether its considered a sedan or sports car?
At the Australian Muscle Car Masters in a couple of weeks, CAMS Historic Group S will be competing. This is a dedicated class for production sports cars, and combines everything from 240Zs, to Shelby Cobras, Corvettes, Lotus Elans, MGs, De Tomaso Panteras, etc, that, in period, would have raced together. But Group S runs separately from Group Na/Nb/Nc Historic Touring Cars. Historic racing is about replicating history. It sucks, and it would be great to find a solution, but you can't change history unfortunately.
If you allow a 240Z to run with the saloons, you also have to allow Corvettes, TVR Griffiths, and other potentially very fast production sports cars as well, and this will only drive away the saloon car people and spread the field out. Its not period correct, and would cause more problems than it would solve.
An interesting side-note regarding this. We have one guy joining HMC/Under 3, who is a Nissan 300Z nut. He owns a collection of these cars, and has spent plenty of dosh on them. But he also really likes the idea of racing a period correct car, with like-minded enthusiasts. So he bought himself a Datsun 240K, a rare early Japanese sedan that is eligible to run, raced in period, and will be period correct. Food for thought?
Otherwise, wouldn't it be great to see a group established for period correct production sports cars. Now thats something that really has some potential.