bru21 wrote:i recon the major driveline components such as engine, gearbox, transfer must be available in australia and have been registered under full registration (ie not tractor) in their previous vehicles and must have low range. no cromoly, titanimum, magnesium etc (or rather define whats allowed to stop ambiguity)
to be honest i think things like atlas transfers, aftermarket diffs rrp >$5000, and comp spec tyres should be banned or attract penalty points. the survival of this sport depends on it. eg is the only one using comp spec tyres having a competitive advantage or cheating? (no offence at all to anyone, just looking at it from a wider perspective)
look at the obc. when i planned my truck specs i thought i could have a few years of competition at little further expense and be competitive (vehicle wise at least). it shits me to see winches that cost >5k become comonplace, 15k motor work not even raise eyebrows but be the norm. the event started out to be about human endurance and design strength with the focus on driver ability, skill, knowledge. now those with spare cash to build 6 figure trucks mean those that don't suffer a huge disadvantage.
i realise the object of competition is to raise the bar but well thought out constraints keep it fun as you can keep your head above water.
the more constraints the better. look at aussie race cars growth
cheers bru
well said, I also agree with what POS said
... no grounds to support your rejection when someone presents a 280kg Chromoly buggy, full custom alumium diff housings, alumium diff cariers, gun drilled chromo axles and finished off nicly with a plastic suzuki hood on it.
What sort of bucks would that set ya back, and out of a small field how many could afford to go down that road?
If you want it to get bigger, make it more accessable to all.
I've seen it happen in bike racing, Advanced Proddy, and later Superstreet started off with basic mods, then can we change this, change that... and in the end, it got out of control.
It happens in all forms of motor sport, starts off cheap, then people get serious, and it ends up being those with largest wallets, or spare cash, or even more - better contacts end up competitive - the rest make up the #s