HOME FORUM RULES CONTACT
     
   
   

Go Back   CLASS RACER FORUM > Class Racer Forums > Stock and Super Stock

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 09-11-2023, 09:35 PM   #11
Jim Hawkins
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 198
Likes: 89
Liked 115 Times in 35 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Do you have to be in the same individual class as the car you protest? In Beuthel's case F/SA or just be in stock eliminator?
Seems like you should be in the same class otherwise anyone there with 750.00 to blow could do it just to be a jerk.
Jim Hawkins is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-11-2023, 10:07 PM   #12
63corvette
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Canyon, Tx
Posts: 551
Likes: 127
Liked 353 Times in 102 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim Hawkins View Post
Do you have to be in the same individual class as the car you protest? In Beuthel's case F/SA or just be in stock eliminator?
Seems like you should be in the same class otherwise anyone there with 750.00 to blow could do it just to be a jerk.
In my case I knew who protested me and it was just to be a jerk and on top of that he did not have to put up any money.
The Division Director told me it was at his discretion to require inspection and that was what he did.
I believe any protestor should be named and money put up.
If it turns out everything was legal the protestor should be named when the legal person is named as being legal.
Just my experience.
Rick Cates
Canyon, TX
63corvette is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-12-2023, 07:31 AM   #13
Charlie Yannetti
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Alpine, NJ
Posts: 568
Likes: 188
Liked 192 Times in 83 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Quote:
Originally Posted by James Perrone View Post
Why as the protester should you have to tear down?
They are paying for the info
And how is it possible to protest someone without being on the property
Don’t you have to put up the $ and complaint?
I have been shouting for several years now that if one files a protest, fees need to be paid at the time of the filing.. there also needs to be a document created, and filled out by the protester, stating the supposed infractions.. this form should include the protester's name, and NHRA membership number should be required.. as well as proof that the required fees have been paid.. ANNDDDDD, no protests can be filed via cellphone.. if you at there, YOU AIN'T!!.. making a call, then putting fees on a credit card, is bogus.. IN REAL LIFE, everyone has the right to face their accuser..

Didn't someone pull this stunt during the Gators, complaining about someone's firewall while not even being in the same State??.. is this the same guy??.. asking for a friend..

I'm not sure about the protester being torn down, just for being the protester, BUT, I'm sure there just might be that move as retaliation.. JUST SAYIN'..
Charlie Yannetti is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-12-2023, 10:48 AM   #14
Brett C
VIP Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Thibodaux, LA
Posts: 1,194
Likes: 327
Liked 1,018 Times in 217 Posts
Default Re: Protests

We got protested at Indy a few years ago after SS class eliminations were complete and had to report to the barn. All went fine and the trophy stayed in our hands. The NHRA rule book states that a formal protest does need to be prior to any eliminations. It is Indy though. I do agree that any form of protest should never be anonymous.
__________________
Brett Candies
4192 Stock/SS
God Bless America
Brett C is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-12-2023, 12:07 PM   #15
Dan Bennett
Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 437
Likes: 839
Liked 591 Times in 134 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Not the same classes, but retribution is not new.

One year at Indy, one Pro Stock team protested another. My memory is hazy enough to not remember what was being protested but have a strong impression it involved Yates and Morgan.

I think Yates was the original, and then Morgan immediately protested him. He was not hiding anything, and was telling anyone who would listen that if his guys were going to be up all night, so was the other team. He picked an area at random to have checked.

Both cars passed and I never saw this again. I don't know if there were any behind the scenes action by Glendora, but for whatever reason it was a one time deal.


That aside, there have some very good suggstions already made and I agree with all of them. The protest procedure is needed and important, but first, the present rules should be followed; and second, an obvious attempt to affect another team's ability to race should not be taken lightly and those who do it for spite should face consequences.

Last edited by Dan Bennett; 09-12-2023 at 12:10 PM.
Dan Bennett is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-12-2023, 01:10 PM   #16
Terry Cain
Senior Member
 
Terry Cain's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Georgetown, Indiana (close to Louisville, KY)
Posts: 775
Likes: 530
Liked 230 Times in 106 Posts
Default Re: Protests

I question why anything else was checked. The protester protested the crank. Everything else should not have been checked.
__________________
Terry Cain ???? STK
tcain19689585@gmail.com
Terry Cain is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-13-2023, 05:13 AM   #17
Cglrcng
Member
 
Cglrcng's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2023
Location: Kingman, AZ
Posts: 403
Likes: 1,454
Liked 328 Times in 182 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry Cain View Post
I question why anything else was checked. The protester protested the crank. Everything else should not have been checked.
If the protest was concerning the Crank (and the crank is inspected & checks legal), then the money paid as a protest fee, should instantly go to the party being protested. (But, that should, and will probably, only be the end of the protest). Their $750.00 (or whatever the protest fee required at the time is, that was posted and paid to NHRA before the teardown), should then be paid to the legal contestant. (They passed that test).

As far as the balance of the teardown, if you are in the barn, and are submitting to the teardown (everyone signs the same documents, and waivers, promises, and has the same rulebook, all prior to entering a race and paying entry fees, though may have differing combos and specs), and each has the right to submit or decline to the teardown...as nobody is held hostage, (and also pay the consequences if the latter is chosen), but once you have entered that barn...If NHRA wants to cc the head, or weigh a rotating assembly, check the intake, etc...It is their right to do so at that point.

You are submitting to an NHRA Inspection we all knew, and agreed to, in advance & at any time (in accordance with the PRINTED rules of course in effect at that particular time, as they are amended often), just like there are separate rules for a protest (with posted fee requirements...when, where, how, etc.), vs a random pullout inspection.

So, unless they amend the rules (in the protest section to reflect "just the protested item will be inspected"), then I think you would be hard pressed to get away with saying no when asked for a head, rotating assembly or anything else. I'm Just saying.

The issue I am hearing (or understanding by just the thread convo so far , as I was not at Indy, so I have ZERO First Hand Knowledge), is that nobody knows who the protester was, and they get to remain anonymous, and they only protested the deepest part of the package (the crank), it may have been retribution, hurt feelings, and the most concerning part...Someone who may not even have been present at the event? And more...

I don't know if my feelings would go so far as to say (both need to tear down), as the protester already (even with deep wallets around), has posted a fee that he risks losing.

But ,if we are just suggesting and discussing things here, I would love to see it amended to read that the protester must also report to the barn and not leave until the protested part(s) are inspected and ruled upon (and if the contestant is declared illegal, he protester may leave the barn with his protest fee in hand, but if legal, the protested competitor gains the fee, and the protester must remain in the barn until that vehicle is fully buttoned up, loaded up and the vehicle, driver, crew, and tools all drive off.

And the NHRA Techs then alone with them get to nod, OK (you made us all stay up for nothing, and lost the protest fee, so you can go now, have a nice evening).

Sorry, not sorry, but I think that would just be more fitting, and so he/she loses just the same amount of sleep as everyone else, and stop any crazy advantage the next morning. Just my 2 cents.
__________________
Gary Lucier - 7832 STK. / 7832 E.T. EF/S Slow Sled. I am, but a simple test of your true patience. So, do all the really "Big Wheelies" you can!
Cglrcng is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-13-2023, 08:01 AM   #18
james schaechter
VIP Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Cumming GA
Posts: 1,988
Likes: 1,281
Liked 1,428 Times in 296 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Quote:
Originally Posted by James Perrone View Post
Why as the protester should you have to tear down?
They are paying for the info
And how is it possible to protest someone without being on the property
Don’t you have to put up the $ and complaint?
I agree. I do think some of the protests are just to aggravate the other racer. As a person that has gone through numerous teardowns for free, I would be happy to get paid.

One thing of note here. NHRA is not supporting their own governance when it comes to teardown.

This lands squarely on the non racer bean counter mentality of NHRA leadership.

It is possible that we see a few more protests only because some competitors know NHRA will not impose teardown and the incentive to set records is greatly reduced.

I predict that NHRA won’t want to do protest teardowns either so they will suppress this with a rule change.

Soon, the only tech allowed by leadership will be akin to handing out parking tickets and fines In the staging lanes.

There is no succession planning for the tech crews at a divisional level when it comes to stock and Superstock. The capable crews they have are stifled by poor management at NHRA. On top of that, at some point they will retire with no trained replacements.

If we at least had the significant teardowns at Indy and some random teardown light events, there would be more compliance overall.
__________________
James Schaechter 3163 STK
james schaechter is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-13-2023, 11:32 PM   #19
Danny Byrd
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 22
Likes: 0
Liked 11 Times in 4 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry Cain View Post
I question why anything else was checked. The protester protested the crank. Everything else should not have been checked.
Danny Byrd
Danny Byrd is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 09-15-2023, 07:26 AM   #20
Cglrcng
Member
 
Cglrcng's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2023
Location: Kingman, AZ
Posts: 403
Likes: 1,454
Liked 328 Times in 182 Posts
Default Re: Protests

Quote:
Originally Posted by Danny Byrd View Post
Danny Byrd
No, the rule. It specifically states the inspection is not limited to the protest. And there is a lot more to it, though there is also a lot missing (or that could be added for further clarity...like a specific form to use to file a competitor protest, who the proper authorities are, etc.), but as it reads it could have very well been very proper to the rule, as long as the protesting competitor was racing at the event (or the registered car owner, assuming meaning as listed on the tech card, who may or may not actually be at the event. They, the registered car owner, could be half way around the world, or an astronaut on the Space Station, but if thier vehicle is racing (competing), in the same Eliminator category (not necessarily in the same class), and the protest is timely filed (the day before elims. (Either class, or category elims.), along with the proper fee, and the protest is accepted (there is an exception if in the opinion of the proper authorities it is not being protested for a proper reason, or to gain a competitive advantage, the protest can be rejected).

I am not quoting the rule, just stating my reading of it. There is no mention of how that fee is paid, and you could go through the process, on either side and get zero back too.

Protested party must disassemble and reassemble (the engine), though at that point they can inspect the entire vehicle), and (then the Technical Dept. Costs are then deducted)...and the balance of the protest fee posted is returned to one of the parties or the other. (At that point I can imagine all kinds of scenarios if things got out of hand). You could pass, and flat out take too long to get it back together and still end up with none of the protest fee if things went sour.

There is no mention of specific parts like "the crank" as originally posted. The Competitor Protest Rule mentions vehicle, protest, in writing, and teardown of The Engine, and fee, and there are no posting of fees if random inspections or NHRA Tech wants it done.

There is definitely a lot of specificity in the rule, and there is a driver rep. on the rules committee representing the Category(s), so if it does not seem right, there is a process, follow the process, and submit proposed rule changes, but for fair and correct reasons.

All need to read the rule first. (They ran the inspection, and checked other things because the rule allows it).

The protest triggered the acceptance, the acceptance triggered the "go to the barn notification", which triggered the inspection, which triggered the teardown, measuring/weighing, further inspection, and the reassembly, and a decision was rendered.

Only those involved know all the nuts and bolts true facts of how it all went down or the why(s).

But, that is the current rule we all agree to, before entering to compete. (I now agree with the poster that said both parties should be required to be subject to the same conditions). Lol.

It would stop a lot of what some may think happened, but deeper pockets would just show up with a Top Fuel crew.
__________________
Gary Lucier - 7832 STK. / 7832 E.T. EF/S Slow Sled. I am, but a simple test of your true patience. So, do all the really "Big Wheelies" you can!
Cglrcng is offline   Reply With Quote
Liked
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:49 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright Class Racer.com. All Rights Reserved. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners.