Postby Loren » Sun Jan 25, 2015 11:35 pm
You guys are picking nits about shit that doesn't matter.
There may be places and situations (like maybe the exit of a turn-around) where touching one or two wheels in the grass in a place where there's no drop-off might be recoverable. But, generally speaking, if you hit grass at Brooksville, it doesn't matter if we call your run a DNF or not. Your time is going to SUCK no matter how quickly you scramble to get back to the pavement. So, why are we even having this discussion?
I mean, seriously. Do we automatically call a spin a DNF? Same thing. After a spin, your run is DONE. There is no recovering the time lost from a spin. But, we don't bother calling it a DNF because the time speaks for itself.
Until/unless the club has some other reason for keeping you out of the grass... either a site-owner that says "don't drive on the grass" or some safety issue (which we might be getting close to if conditions don't improve at Brooksville)... we don't need to officially say that grass = DNF. And, again... if we had some reason to require it, the penalty would be more harsh than a DNF because the time penalty for going off into the grass is already equivalent to a DNF.
IF we decide that we need to ensure that no driver goes into the grass for safety reasons, we'll let you know. The rule will be a warning the first time, and showing you to the gate the second time. Again, we DO NOT have this rule at this time. But, that's the kind of rule that would make sense if our goal was to absolutely keep you out of the grass.
Loren Williams - Loren @ Invisiblesun.org
The "Push Harder, Suck Less" philosophy explained:
Push Harder - Drive as close to the limit of your tires as possible.
Suck Less - Drive something resembling a proper racing line.