Jason I never said that. If your starting a fresh build then I would go with a 99 because the cost isn't much different. If you have a 1.6 work on your race craft. Like Jim said in an earlier post, if your glued to the bumper of a 99 entering a corner prepare to get pulled down the straight away. It's called race craft, brake earlier to leave a gap and accelerate thru the corner to have a higher exit speed and surprisingly enough you can keep up and pass a 99. Also if your. 1.6 sees a dyno once a year and you don't adjust for temp/weather then your leaving even more on the table. There are plenty of places where the 1.6 is superior to the 99+ cars and I don't hear them asking for anything, you also have to take into account who's constantly complaint about this and where they show up on the results at big races.
I was being sarcastic, but its not far from what is happening just due to attrition. See I bought a 1.6L because I didn't know any better 6yrs ago and built it myself and then re-built it after wrecking. So I have a ton more than just the car invested. I have a garage full of stuff for the 1.6L. I almost jumped to a 99' before I sourced the 1.6L tub, but I couldn't sell my 1.6L in wrecked condition and get anything out of it. Now I'm looking for a 01' up because the 99' will be DOA in 2 yrs, mark my words. Racing is a very expensive hobby and there are those with much deeper pockets who will continue the development and jump to where they see any advantage, perceived or otherwise. This ever moving march forward is the nature of racing. What concerns me most about this march is the deflation of value of the 1.6L cars. If I do build an new car, I'll probably just end up keeping the old one since I won't be able to sell it for anywhere close to what I have in it.
Now back to the threads original premise.
I've watched the Video of Buras. He's completely surrounded by 99's and he doesn't pull out and try to pass. He doesn't because he'll get freight trained by the 99's. And he can't lay back and get a run, because he's being pushed from behind. Race craft won't get that car to the front in that field!
If we do adjust the torque on the 1.6L we'll probably need to restrict it to limit its peak HP. We need to find a way to allow the 1.6L to still hold some value. Add making it more competitive will certainly do that. We can accomplish this in many ways (Disclaimer:I'm an engineer, not an engine builder)
1) Open up the Intake/exhaust (port/polish)
2) Add CAM's and adjustable gears
3) Megasquirt ECU
4) Overbore/Compression
5) Lightened Flywheel
6) Any combination of the above
Like I said before, some/all of these will give us better torque down low, but it will also raise the peak hp/tq. So we'll need to make adjustments
1) Increased weight (Can only do this to a point then we'll introduce brake issues)
2) Restriction
Me personally, I would invest ~$1500 on a few upgrades. We're already machining the heads so adding port/polish would not be too much of a stretch. Cleaning up an exhaust manifold can be done in anyone's garage. Anyway, we have 1 more year under the current rule set. If it keeps going the direction it is, the NA will be gone in 5 yrs 1.6 and 1.8. So there needs to be an adjustment either to keep the NA viable or phase it out completely.