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Existing 63-car ladder: total number of bye runs: 1 When trying to correct a perceived issue, beware of the unintended consequences. $.02,
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Michael Beard - NHRA/IHRA 3216 S/SS |
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Think outside of the box Michael.... one race to make it into the 64 car field. The other 63 cars don't have to run.
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Tom Sheehan SS GT/NA 1046 |
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Lets take a simple thing, like a qualifying ladder and complicate the sh&t out of it
...LOL!
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Richard Preiser 1613 FGT/I 1510 C/SA 161 F/DA |
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I don't get it. How do you make a 64 car field from 63 cars?
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Either way, if there were 63, he was correct, one bye run, and then there would be an even number left (32).
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Tom Sheehan SS GT/NA 1046 |
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I've bracket raced and class raced with the AHRA and raced with the NSS and in most of those they drew a car number for the bye runs thereby making it a random choice rather than rewarding the top fast cars who could go the most under.
Just sayin' JimR
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Jim Rountree |
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I really don't see AHRA as a good example to use for a business model. My recollection in NSS was that a ladder was generated by qualifying by closest to one's own particular index. Even the .90 classes "qualify' closest to, after a random first round. You need some kind of system...hence odd number bye runs.
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"We are lucky we don't get as much Government as we pay for." Will Rogers |
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Another example, if you have a 41-car field (one of the "magic ladders" as is being discussed here), there's a total of 4 bye runs throughout eliminations.
Utilizing Tom's ladder, it's actually more complicated than what I'd originally thought. In order to get 41 cars to 32 in round 2, you would have to pair 18 cars (sending 9 into rnd 2) and give 23 cars bye runs. (18+23=41 rnd 1 cars. 9+23=32 rnd 2 cars). I don't see how awarding 23 bye runs is an improvement over 4. Additionally, this procedure would cost an additional $650 in round money (Based on NHRA Div. 1 payouts), as there would be 16 cars left in Rnd 3 as opposed to 11, and more cars in each successive round. Running all the singles would take more time as well, unless you ran them side-by-side. Multiply the time and money by the number of classes that would use this system. I do enjoy the mental gymnastics of working through ideas, though.
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Michael Beard - NHRA/IHRA 3216 S/SS |
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I really don't have any knowledge of how they made it work in later rounds. Before each round they would announce who had the bye run and that was all I cared about so I never looked into it. At the AHRA Southern Nationals in 1976 car numbers were drawn for the bye run for the first round. I ran two NSS races ( Gainesville, Atlanta) in '89 or '90 where they pulled cars for byes. This was when the NSS Association was in it's infancy but later went to the closest to index for qualifying but in Atlanta car numbers were drawn for match ups and byes; in Gainesville cars were matched by comparable ET's. After that the qualifying evolved to what it is today. JimR
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Jim Rountree |
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