Racing and Paddock Chat The latest news, talk, and gossip from the world of bike racing, you can also discuss track days here too. |
|
Thread Tools |
15-08-08, 06:17 PM | #1 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
American Claiming rule
Aint it funny the way you never notice sommat for yrs & yrs & more yrs than youd care to admit, then when you do notice it, you keep coming across it time after time ....
The claiming rule in USA im on about, not that darn camera pointing down at the Taxi parking spot outside Lloyds in Camberwell (hope it aint turned on!) Reading about a race in Ontario in '71, the MV squad didnt go cos they worried the bikes would be claimed .... I think i read something about a team actually losing their super expensive factory bike for a $1000 due to said rule...(only time its happened?) WTF ??? sages please explain & does it still exist...? |
15-08-08, 06:21 PM | #2 |
Member
Mega Poster
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Barnet Herts
Posts: 5,070
|
Re: American Claiming rule
Go on,tell us what you are talking about.
__________________
On a clear day we stand there and look further than the ordinary eye can see. |
15-08-08, 07:58 PM | #3 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
It's a rule from the AMA as far as I am aware:
Quote:
EDIT: These are the AMATEUR rules, AFAIK it doesn't apply under the PRO rules |
|
15-08-08, 10:22 PM | #4 | |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
Quote:
|
|
16-09-08, 10:19 PM | #5 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
I would cough $1000 now for a 71 MV.
But seriously if you are correct thats a crazy rule. Only in the U.S.A. eh! |
16-09-08, 11:01 PM | #6 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
Citroen 2CV racing in this country used to run a similar rule. It was to stop people spending huge amounts on their cars, cos they knew they could lose it to a competitor.
They set an upper limit on how much any car could be sold for, so it was in everyone's interests not to spend to much on tuning and preparation. That way it kept the class affordable for anyone who wanted to enter. |
27-09-08, 05:02 PM | #7 |
Moderator
Mega Poster
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: In the garage where I belong
Posts: 17,082
|
Re: American Claiming rule
Yeah, I think it's quite clever. Lots of budget car events do this too... It's good for levelling the playing fields, which presumably is why MV didn't want to play- they obviously felt they had some killer advantage that people would want to get their hands on.
__________________
"We are the angry mob, we read the papers every day We like what we like, we hate what we hate But we're oh so easily swayed" |
03-11-08, 03:35 AM | #8 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
This is how I remember it. BSA and Triumph were racing the three cylinder bikes in a class that only allowed minimum mods. The winning BSA was claimed for $10,000- by a privateer. The BSA guys did not know much about the rule. They gave the guy another bike, one that did not have all the money and mods applied, plus $50,000- so they could keep the winning bike. There was a lot of money being spent on British motors to make them competitive. The motors had some inherent basic design problems. My 68 Dunstall went quite fast after we changed it to match the John Player funded bikes, and it handled better than the newer Isolastic suspension wobble mobiles.
Crusty |
03-11-08, 07:14 AM | #9 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
|
03-11-08, 05:00 PM | #10 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Re: American Claiming rule
The event I am referring to happened in the States, as in USA.
Ontario is in Canada. Canadian Motorcycle Association rules did not have the claiming rule or anything like it at the time. CMA governed all races in Canada, so any claiming incident did not happen there. I had an expert CMA license at the time, plus a junior motorcross, and senior cross country license. Junior senior and expert were the grades in Canada at the time. I also had an AMA ( American ) sportsman license. This license was for non pro riders. But the sportsman riders could ride with the pros if they got a different level license from AMA. Yvon Duhamel father of Miguel was the number 1 plate at the time, followed by Steve Allen. Duhamel road for Yamaha, Allen for Suzuki. Crusty |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
insurance claiming | Wideboy | Bikes - Talk & Issues | 21 | 01-03-09 07:46 PM |
Are you claiming your 2.5% VAT? | Berlin | Idle Banter | 18 | 17-12-08 08:20 AM |
claiming tax back | pencil shavings | Idle Banter | 6 | 27-10-08 02:18 PM |
Put the SV down - is it worth claiming? | Goonermadness | Bikes - Talk & Issues | 18 | 21-03-08 07:52 AM |
She's claiming against me!! | Monkey6879 | Bikes - Talk & Issues | 24 | 22-04-07 08:44 AM |