Tyson MacCormack wrote:
Ming Wong wrote:
I attended the SCCA National Tour Event in Devens 2 years ago. It was over 200 cars. There was a cap and you had to pre-register and if you were late then you went on a waiting list. Run groups, grid assignments, worker assignments are done BEFORE the event. We were up at 5am and there was already a line to enter the site when we got there. There is no hand holding, you are expected to know what to do. There are at least 5 people working grid. There is someone there to tell you to get in you car. someone else to tell you to pull up to the start line. If you're not ready, you don't run. The course is designed to have multiple cars on course. If you get lost, you are not allowed to stop on course. A car takes off the line every 15-20 seconds.
^ that's exactly how they ran things in Edmonton as well. No BS at all - if you held things up you didn't run.
Also, if you drove like an complete idiot on the streets around the event (like most of the 'new' people and many of the spectators did at the MMSC event on Wednesday...) than you were permanently banned or the organizers called the police right away. Some spectator in a white mazda 3 who was speeding out of the parking lot trying to look tough and almost took a competitor's car

I didn't see the guy you're talking about, but to be fair, they had the exit gate locked and everyone was forced to drive against "traffic" inappropriately to leave the venue. We were lucky that no tourists wanted to quickly drive in around those blind corners when we were leaving
I think our grid and our actual runs happen very efficiently. From what I've seen, it's typically:
- The first run group's hesitation to go straight to their station after they finish their runs that costs us 15 minutes (no one should be doing anything to their car at that point - everyone should've gotten race-ready beforehand and everyone should get street-ready after the event is finished), and
- The time lapse between the end of registration and the start of the drivers meeting that costs us a good 20-30 extra minutes. If we can have the 10-15 regulars (really, anyone that has >50% chance of showing up) already entered, whether they're actually pre registered online or not, that time could probably be drastically reduced. It would be a lot faster to delete a driver than enter one, and those individuals could already be set into default run groups (with a few additions and a few subtractions at each event depending on who is actually there). If new people (and anyone that competes infrequently and therefore isn't in the running for a plaque) don't end up running with the rest of their class, I don't think there will be any issues or complaints.
Then again, for all I know it's already done that way... I try to leave the guys alone when they're working hard to get things ready