
undercoating removal
#1
Posted 11-28-2011 12:27 PM

#2
Posted 11-28-2011 12:41 PM









#3
Posted 11-28-2011 01:49 PM

- pat slattery likes this
Frank
TnT Racing
SCCA Ohio Valley Region




#4
Posted 11-28-2011 04:36 PM


2010 NASA Midwest GTS2 Runner-Up
2011 The SM Saga Begins
#5
Posted 11-28-2011 06:44 PM









#6
Posted 11-28-2011 09:39 PM

I got these CGWs at McFadden-Dale here in town.

ez strip 2 by Dave Stevens, on Flickr

ez srip 1 by Dave Stevens, on Flickr
#7
Posted 11-28-2011 09:44 PM




#8
Posted 11-29-2011 12:36 AM

#9
Posted 11-29-2011 04:19 AM

I was looking in the GCR for that statement of legality, but was unable to find it. Is this rules creep?
Paint is open. That stuff on the bottom of the car is just paint. SM rules are pretty ambiguous for the most part. Rules and specs need to be measured and speced to insure compliance. Not some mamby pamby "if it doesnt' say you can then you can't". If there is not a quantitative measurement, it's tech shed legal. People cam bitch all they want about spirit and intent, but when it comes down to it, if it can't be measured or quantified, people, including me, will push those boundaries. For example, let;s say the undercoating removal is not legal. How is tech (those few regions that have tech in the first place) to know if that is the factory coating or some after market coating I put on that is half the weight. How can they tell if I have a heat coating in the exhaust manifold that is the same color as the piece? They can't. How about the inconsistency of the welds in the exhuast manifold? I've only seen a few and they've all had booger welds at the flange in various places. Can you tell if I got the die grinder out and used a micro tig torch to reweld the manifold to the flange to remove the boogers for maximum flow?
If you can't measure it or quantify it it's tough, if not impossible to objectively enforce the rule.
- Glenn likes this
#10
Posted 11-29-2011 05:21 AM

Until now.

#11
Posted 11-29-2011 02:11 PM

Is this legal or not?
Pat, per undercoating the answer seems to be, yes within nasa & no within SCCA.
nasa 2011 Rule
3.1.16. All chassis/structural/electrical repairs, if performed, shall be in concurrence with factory
procedures, specifications, and dimensions. Unless specifically authorized by the
manufacturer for repair or allowed by these rules, no reinforcement, i.e., seam welding,
material addition, etc., is permitted. No acid dipping of the unibody is permitted.
Undercoating removal is permitted.SCCA 2011 Rule
C.4.k. All chassis/structural/electrical repairs, if performed, shall be in concurrence with factory
procedures, specifications, and dimensions. Unless specifically authorized by the
manufacturer for repair or allowed by these rules, no reinforcement, i.e., seam welding,
material addition, etc., is permitted.
Are there other written rules within nasa or SCCA that apply to undercoat?



#12
Posted 11-29-2011 02:24 PM

#13
Posted 11-29-2011 03:18 PM

Are you saying you've modifiied the inside of your header? Are you saying you belive that to be legal? Ethical? Intended? Or just that you've never been caught? Until now.
Prove it.
That's his entire point.



#14
Posted 11-29-2011 03:45 PM


#15
Posted 11-29-2011 05:33 PM

So back to square one with some people: if you don't get caught, you're a winner.
If you don't expect your competitors to live in the gray area you might find another sport/hobby that isn't as notorious for pushing the limits on what's legal. Just sayin.







#16
Posted 11-29-2011 06:27 PM

Does SCCA allow you to repaint your car, David?
Do you remember this article?
June, 2008 GrassRoots MotroSports
Pros vs. Schmoes
"This 1994 Miata began its new life as a race car by being stripped to a bare shell. The team then removed all of the undercoating and sound deadening to reduce weight and make the whole car easier to work on."
Everyone associated with this ^ sentence backed off in a big hurry when it was requested they support the sentence with a SCCA rule.
Don't be side tracking the issue with your paint comment. Please site the rule witin the SCCA that allows the undercoating to be removed & not replaced.



#17
Posted 11-29-2011 06:50 PM

Don't be side tracking the issue with your paint comment. Please site the rule witin the SCCA that allows the undercoating to be removed & not replaced.
Undercoating in the automotive business is considered paint. I see nothing in either sanctions rules that define it as anything else. You and Jim B completely missed my point. I'm pleased that Rob gets what I'm trying to say. How do you know that the deadening I put back on the car is the same weight and spec? How many different vendors and batches of deadening has Mazda gone through? I don't see any thickness or specific info regarding the deadening in my FSM. The point, and forgive me for shouting...
IF IT CAN'T BE MEASURED OR QUANTIFIED, IT SHOULD NOT BE RULE.
Otherwise it's too objective particularly when the techs are part time volunteers with various amounts of training. That is in the regions where they actually have tech. That's not a disparagement to those that do volunteer. Depending on how sick I am (a PET they wanted to do 2 wks ago was just approved today, good thing I don't have a bureaucrat or some panel between me and my team of docs deciding what health care I need...) If I'm too sick to race I'll go help at some events. If I'm not well enough to do that I'll spend even more time here being one of them thar Internet blow hards. I'm confident my ass will be healthy enough to be in a car at the Buttonwillow school, though with the way this build is going I may have to rent a seat from Sami or Rush. Even then for the nationals I'll volunteer as well.
Dave
#18
Posted 11-29-2011 07:03 PM

Are you saying you've modifiied the inside of your header? Are you saying you belive that to be legal? Ethical? Intended? Or just that you've never been caught?
Until now.
If I was doing I'm not stupid enough to post about it in a forum. I was going to use a bit more colorful language but I don't think Drago would appreciate it. You can get Dave uncut on the blog.... and even that sounds a bit racy.

Can you stop me from calling Blake or Drago and having them send me every 1.6 exhaust manifold they have so I can flow bench every one? I've only seen the inside of a few, some have some welding I'd consider unacceptable, big, inconsistent boogers. How do you know I got one that has nice, slim beads? I don't see a diameter rule specing the diameter of the input side on the manifold flange. That should be a spec rule and as long as that dimension is met, you should be able to smooth the welds.
As for interior coating, many of them are made from oxide and carbon bases. Same stuff as rust and exhaust. Reckon you can find a lab that can tell what is intentional coating and what is the result of a junkyard manifold from a 200k mile plus, 22 yr old chick car? Am I going to intentionally cheat the rules? No ,not knowlngly. As far as you know...


#19
Posted 11-29-2011 08:39 PM

Is there a word for people who intentionally break laws? Yes, they're called criminals. The fact that some of them get rich and never get caught may make them "champions" in their endeavors. They're still ... well, words too stiff for your blog ... in my book. You cheat, you're a cheater, not a champion.
I'm always blown away that people who seem otherwise honorable will brag here about how they break the rules and get away with it. They should be banned for life instead. Racing, for people who deserve to do it, is less about winning than about being a winner. Cheating makes you a loser, even if you "win" a wooden plaque for it.
[/rant]
All of which is to say I didn't "miss" your point. As you rightly said, undercoating is paint. We have no specs for paint, and it's clear that paint can be replaced at will.
- Sergio M likes this
#20
Posted 11-29-2011 09:00 PM

Here's a good one to start. I worked for this dude a while back. He had a Project, his name was Alan. I can assure you that he was a Parson only in name sake. It's top posted so you have to read it from the bottom up. http://barking.roadd...ory/mexico-tour Basically it's the tale of what happens when you let your inexperienced, big fake titted trophy wife do a gig that requires a seasoned professional. I've been in the upper echelon of entertainment technology for 31 years now, 26 of those touring with some of the largest acts on the planet. Do you really think there's nothing I've done/seen/heard that has been too "stiff". In that context, stiff is good.
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