Let me just say it this way: If you're driving a car that changes in STRUT TOWER BAR makes actual significant handling changes to your car that a relatively inexperienced driver can actually feel and isn't a placebo, well, you're driving such a piece of crap that all bets are off on what you should exactly be doing to "fix" it. Why? Because you have a fundamentally broken system. A chassis that flexes THAT much could cause all sorts of strange problems that could manifest themselves in strange and unpredictable ways, IMHO. That is to say that just because removing one from a Talon made it oversteer doesn't mean removing one from some other AWD car might not have the opposite effect. That's why I question the stance on adding/removing them having XYZ effect. Sure, you can usually say those sorts of things about swaybars and such, but not really on strut bars, IMHO.
As for why the SCCA stock class rules are as they are, Wes is mostly right. It's somewhat historical. Why not "just change it"? Because it would change the competitive balance of most of the stock classes DRASTICALLY. That is to say we wouldn't even know what the "car to have" is in most classes, but I dare say it wouldn't be the same in most cases. Given that, the members that compete don't want that kind of change. The only people that ever ask for changes like that are people that have a car that currently is NOT competitive and would now become competitive with the change. So it doesn't happen.
Also, most people ask in the form of "why not just add this one little thing?" Usually the "one little thing" is rear bars on FWD cars. That kind of thing usually gets turned down both because it would upset the competitive balance of a number of classes but it is also "yet another allowance in STOCK" class racing. It's hard to justify the work involved with THAT when every season there are always a number of letters (at least as many as asked FOR allowances) that ask for FEWER stock class allowances. But the same thing applies...it's always from someone who either isn't a serious competitor anyway -or- has a car that stands to benefit a lot more than something else from the change. Then there's the fact that just taking away the FSB allowance (for example) would change the competitive balance of so many classes at once -and- negatively impacts tire wear dramatically for so many.
Anyway, enough venting on why it is like it is. I might sound a little crabby, but I do welcome discussion on these issues. Maybe someone will come up with the magic bullet that will help with reform in a better direction. For now things are what they are and aren't changing without a comprehensive plan, not just "I want allowance XYZ" or "please take away allowance EFG."
(For those that don't know, I'm on the SCCA SEB, the seven person rules making board for the SCCA. And those are the rules THSCC uses. Want to change them? Write a letter to
seb@scca.com, but you do need to be an SCCA member and include your member number.)
--Donnie