Shoaz
Studly dood
Ford won the "deconstructor's championship" last year for all the SHO carnage. Honestly, I think it's just a matter of how much these things weigh that causes the engines and transaxles to explode with alarming frequency.
I think it's just that people take, as they should, crappy cars to LeMons events that weren't properly maintained and were close to the end of their life, anyway. Given the number of SHO race cars that have been around for a LONG time and lived, long, reliable lives with regular road course beatings and regular maintenance, I don't think there's anything at all inherent that makes a SHO more likely to break at a LeMons event than anything else.
The weight doesn't have anything to do with it. I've been racing the Pumpkin with a minimum competition weight of 3374 lbs. The engine and transmission have been the most reliable things on the car.
And I second the notion that you're likely to not only get a ton of BS laps added, but you'll also be a penalty magnet straight out of the box.
That's to be expected I guess. I decided I wasn't going to build this car where the intention is to give the judges the impression that it is a $500 car. Instead, I'm building a car I KNOW is a $500 car. I know some people who can't build a $500 anything. The end product is going to vary widely depending on how resourceful you are and who you know, so why bother trying to build something that adheres to whatever that is? As long as I know it's a legitimate sub-$500 car, I know I did my best to abide by their rules. Plus, I don't care. We have no road racing experience and will have a hard time finishing this race, much less winning it.
It doesn't matter what you think or know about the car, it matters what the judges think. Those guys have an established standard of what makes a LeMons car, with a ton of experience of seeing all manner of cobbled-together crap wagons passing through the inspection tent, and you need to be prepared for the idea that if you bring something with mechanical prep far past that standard you're going to pay penalties for it.
We raced against Eyesore's Miata, and it's definitely within the spirit of LeMons. When you look close at that car the thing that keeps going through your head is "WTF?" It's very believable that there's not more than $500 in that car. They just turned the stock exhaust header upside-down to mount the turbo, which isn't anything special at all. And they had active aero controlled by a headlight motor connected to the brake light, which I still think is the coolest thing I've seen on the track in a long time.
They also had the coolest costumes by far.
This:

It looks to me that what you're building, especially with the coilovers, is going to get their attention. All I'm saying is be prepared for that and don't get upset if you wind up with a ton of BS laps and creative penalties.

