Thanks guys. I already read all the info related to Tarheel's HPDE program and that was my conclusion as well. As I said, the only thing that made me question my interpretation of the rules/requirements was the fact that somebody who is heavily involved with Tarheel's HPDE program kept insisting that a hardtop was sufficient. No biggie-- I'll let them know that this is not the case the next time I see them.
Les Davis wrote:
Well, don't know the answer to your question, but I have an HPDE legal roll bar I'd be happy to sell you to install.
Which bar do you have Les? I bought a '91 Miata with the intention of using it as a DD with an occasional track event but I recently picked up a '99 and I'm leaning heavily towards using that one. Both are currently bone-stock and it really is amazing how much more refined the NB Miatas are compared to the previous years. Anyway, I know the NB Miatas can't use some of the NA bars so that might be a potential issue.
scottjohnson wrote:
I know someone with an old beater Celica that might be talked into some sort of a deal.
Thanks Scott! I'd really have to think about that one. My gut feeling is that I wouldn't be comfortable in somebody else's car in that sort of environment. While I have no problem walking away from one of my cars if something happens, I'm not sure I want to be put in the position where I have to write a check for somebody else's hard work. Same thing with rally-x...
Stacy King wrote:
Now... I'm curious why you were 'bored' doing HPDE before? I would think even crappy events would be fun. Tell us your experiences. Was it simply the lack of competition? Cause we have a cure for that with our Time Trial portion of our events.

(Of course, that requires a roll bar even in non-convertibles)
It was a few things Stacy. I got into HPDE's *after* racing go-karts, Mini-Cups, Bandoleros and a few Legends cars for several years so the lack of competition was the most obvious thing. Going from having ~40 maniacs inches away from you for an entire race to passing cars with a point-by was a little anti-climatic to say the least. The majority of the racing I did was on ovals (gasp!) so the HPDE's offered a chance to get a little variety. Some would even say that this ex-oval-head even figured out how to turn right.
It was also fun to run on some of the bigger tracks that I wouldn't have ever seen running in the circles I was (literally and figuratively!). Well, after that novelty wore off, there really wasn't much left. Everything on a big track happens so slowly compared to what I was used to that it just wasn't much fun anymore. It was nearly impossible to find somebody you could evenly dice with due to the large variance in driver skill/ car type/car prep.
I started in '96 with a '95 M3 and while that was a great track car, I decided I didn't want to risk wadding it up considering I was making payments on it at the time. That is what started me down the Miata path as I considered them disposable at the price they were fetching at the time. I enjoyed running Miatas a bit more than the M3 since I actually had to work to pass people but there was still no close competition and everything was even more slow-motion.
Now don't get me wrong, I realize that competition isn't the point of an HPDE. Ever since Tarheel started their time-trial events, I thought that might make track events interesting to me again. Without getting into the whole auto-x/road-race debate, I tend to think it still won't be fast-paced enough for me but I'm tempted to give it a shot anyway.
Jim