It figures........typical clumpers.Max Hayter wrote:In SD two weeks ago, Brian Peter, Doug Rowse and I were clumping.

Moderator: Mike Simanyi
It figures........typical clumpers.Max Hayter wrote:In SD two weeks ago, Brian Peter, Doug Rowse and I were clumping.
Do you know the meaning of and/or? The way I read it, it's optional. I agree that station chiefs should have brief meeting with their corner workers to make sure everyone is on the same page. This makes perfect common sense. But it says nothing about a drivers' meeting.Bill Schenker wrote:And Safety mtgs. are not at the discretion of the SSS, Event Master or even Sara Palin herself; they are mandatory. From the '09 Solo Rules: E.VIII.D.5 "Conduct a meeting with Crowd Control Marshals and/or course workers prior to start of the event." Since we allow people that run in the afternoon to show up after the morning meeting, we have a 2nd mtg. before the afternoon heats.
Um......I'm not sure clumpist is a word. :mrt:Max Hayter wrote:Anti-clumpist :unimpressed:
Having seen the video of the hit, i honestly do not thing any amount of padding would have helped. It was a square hit on a solid obstacle. A padded wedge to divert the energy to the side would be a lot more beneficial. I saw the "fix" they put in place, which is pretty laughable (for a non-laughing matter). imagine driving 90 MPH into a solid concrete wall, and now imagine driving into it at 90mph, but with a 6" padding in front of that wall.Mako Koiwai wrote:Padding might have helped ... the right type of padding ... but "No padding" certainly didn't help. ;)
Interesting comparison.Sebastian Rios wrote:Impressive range in spelling on "Newbies"![]()
Bill M.: Nubis (Elegant, I like it)
Craig N.: Nubee's (I hate possessive apostrophes)
George S.: Nuby's (There's that darn apostrophe again.)
Bill S.: Newbie (Classical spelling)
They also put a vertical wall that extends up to the roof in between the track and the supports, so... the padding is basically pointless anyways.Jeff Shyu wrote:I saw the "fix" they put in place, which is pretty laughable (for a non-laughing matter). imagine driving 90 MPH into a solid concrete wall, and now imagine driving into it at 90mph, but with a 6" padding in front of that wall.
Don't forget my fave, noobies. I'm with you on that apostrophe. Drives me nut'sSebastian Rios wrote:Impressive range in spelling on "Newbies"![]()
Bill M.: Nubis (Elegant, I like it)
Craig N.: Nubee's (I hate possessive apostrophes)
George S.: Nuby's (There's that darn apostrophe again.)
Bill S.: Newbie (Classical spelling)
Sebastian Rios wrote:Impressive range in spelling on "Newbies"![]()
Bill M.: Nubis (Elegant, I like it)
Craig N.: Nubee's (I hate possessive apostrophes)
George S.: Nuby's (There's that darn apostrophe again.)
Bill S.: Newbie (Classical spelling)
Try to imagine being in a deposition or on the witness stand and being asked if any formal meeting was held to instruct those new to the sport what to do or what not do and answering "No, it's not required, so we don't bother."Bill Martin wrote:Craig has it right. If safety meetings were mandatory, that requirement would be in Paragraph 6, EVENT OPERATION. There is no logical reason to bury an important requirement like that back in the appendixes. Now I don't have the most current book. Has that requirement shown up in 6? Otherwise, at best Bill, all you've demonstrated is the rulebook has loose ends AND/OR inconsistencies. Duh.
But if you insist it's mandatory, let's get a written statement to that effect from Topeka. Bet they won't give it to you. (Because it's not.)
Good example. The force with which he struck the poll would be in the thousands of pounds. The human body doesn't take to well to that.Jeff Shyu wrote:Having seen the video of the hit, i honestly do not thing any amount of padding would have helped. It was a square hit on a solid obstacle. A padded wedge to divert the energy to the side would be a lot more beneficial. I saw the "fix" they put in place, which is pretty laughable (for a non-laughing matter). imagine driving 90 MPH into a solid concrete wall, and now imagine driving into it at 90mph, but with a 6" padding in front of that wall.Mako Koiwai wrote:Padding might have helped ... the right type of padding ... but "No padding" certainly didn't help. ;)
The problem was that the center was designed by a typical architect, with the typical "looks great in rendering, and on television". We used to joke about stuff like this in architecture school "if it looks like you can hurt yourself on it, then it's a good design". unfortunately, in this case, that became a reality.
I'm pretty dissatisfied with how the whole situation was handled.
From what I've gathered, it seems like it's unanimous that the noobs should have a meeting. What's being debated is whether the veterans need to listen if there's nothing new to present.Bob Beamesderfer wrote:Try to imagine being in a deposition or on the witness stand and being asked if any formal meeting was held to instruct those new to the sport what to do or what not do and answering "No, it's not required, so we don't bother."
That's a likely answer that you'll get from Topeka because I got it when asking about something that is at the regions' discretion. Risk Management is much happier when regional event officials use logic and common sense IN ADDITION to the rule book.
The Obama administration has pointed out that a section of the Health Care Reform bill deals specifically with clumping. To wit, "No one shall engage in clumping or conspire to clump until such time as the government issues a ruling as to how it will be controlled and taxed".Max Hayter on 15 Feb 2010 18:19
Anti-clumpist