Tom, don't want to defend SCCA when they can defend themselves, but couple of thoughts. Firstly the South West Div SCCA annual schedule is usually put out in December for the next year. The 3-4 weeks mentioned above is registration not a commitment to the date. I doubt that any region allows registration months in advance. Secondly I urge everyone to give both SCCA and COTA till after this weekend to lock down details on what is (to COTA) the smallest event on thier calendar so far. I have no doubt we will all have several months advance notice for what is likely to prove to be one of the most popular club race weekends in the country. The bigger problem is to figure out how to get a reasonable amount of track time on test day when 350 cars show up - or to fight for main paddock space
Cnj
Cnj: I completely agree with the tenor of your remarks. This is a great opportunity (COTA is charging $50k to rent the track for a day to private parties). COTA and Lonestar need time to get it figured out. That's fine and reasonable, especially for a first time event at a new track. I do, as you can tell, disagree that there is no reason to allow registration for events in general 90 days in advance. First, it is happening. On motorsportsreg.com, you can register for events through the end of February now. That's about 100 days in advance (and ironically the event 100 days from now is the SCCA national convention). Second, while SCCA's problem in many regions is getting enough racers to show up, in principle there is a limit to how many cars can be accepted to a race weekend and registration could be closed once some reg number is reached. In that case, racers traveling long distance don't know if they're in until it is too late (Surprise! No race for you). Third, the "guess and check" system of race calendars and registration is a PITA. It caters to the hard core (which is fine) and discourages the new and the less committed (not fine). I want SCCA to succeed, but casual and disorganized calendar systems, together with other squirelly systems (don't get me started on licensing), aren't the way to grow. Anyway, I don't want to highjack this thread any more than I already have. Thanks for listening.