MikeWhitney wrote:
Getting back on topic to explain some things.
Communication of times and penalties last weekend was about as good as we have ever had it.
As a member of the timing & scoring team, I have to disagree (sorry Mike). From my viewpoint, communication of times & penalties was lacking compared to our typical past events. No fault of anyone, it's just that we were relying on a person to communicate the raw times instead of the usual automatic visual readout. Sometimes the announcers were being distracted and weren't able to get every single time announced - I noticed quite a few were missed - again, nobody's fault, it is what it is. As far as cone penalties go, again I think we fell short of our usual capabilities. From inside the bus, the reason was obvious. The loudest sound in the bus, by far, was the announcer's voice - the speakers attached to the bus were much closer and louder inside the bus than with our past set-up, which was more distracting to those of us trying to do timing & scoring. It was often hard to hear course workers/cone penalties, requiring multiple back-and-forth radio communications at times. It was also much more difficult to communicate cone penalties from inside the bus to the announcer, and as hard as I tried to make it happen, I ended up giving up at times just to avoid complicating the situation more by shouting cone penalties that might or might not get heard/announced.
Also, not a complaint about any particular event, etc., but personally, it's obvious that T&S runs smoother and is a whole lot less stressful when we can see car nos. at both the start and finish lines from inside the bus - it gives us the opportunity to double check the time for each car (instead of relying on "blind" faith that a car wasn't accidentally missed, etc.), and it keeps the airwaves clearer, since the starter doesn't call in each car no. at the line. While I agree that the flexibility of running course configurations we couldn't before the wireless set is beneficial, there is some downside to distant start or finish lines from the timing standpoint.
Just my opinion, FWIW.