Probably, most of us agree, "too many rules = too many hassles", but it solves nothing as it stands since the rule is already there.
I say get rid of this rule alltogether. I doubt anything could be written without a loophole of some sort or penalizing someone for nothing.
"Spirit of the era" is to vague, too many different opinions on where to draw the line.
"What we need to avoid is things like the lowboy pipe on the YZa in VMX mag several issues ago." This pipe looked so out of place on this bike, to me it was all wrong, but what does it really matter? Are we concerned about ugly bikes at the races or being beaten by an ugly bike?
It's a very real scenario for those who live a long way from the action. There's already a precedent. Something almost identical happened to John Boag at the WA Nats over bolts instead of rivets. My perception of that action is that it had a massive impact on pre75 racing, esp at Nats level. People rightly think, "If thats how they're going to play, I'm out of here". We can ill-afford another like action.
The old bolts versus rivets myth again.
Never has a protest been lodged on the basis that rivets were replaced by bolts.This story refers to the pre 65 CZ twinport which has a funny sort of one-piece sprocket / brake hub with a ¾ alloy hub riveted to it. By the late seventies they had the more conventional style hub with a normal style sprocket bolted on. Two very different types of hubs that are
described as either bolted or riveted
The bike in question at the Nats had the later hub in the earlier bike & this was the basis of the protest. Yes, it’still a very anal point as it clearly wasn’t performance enhancing but as the major part was from another era the protest was upheld.
Much the same as having a round section swingarm instead of square box on a pre 70 DT1, not performance enhancing, but the parts must be of the era.
The rider I believe was Boagy & he should have known better at a National but I don’t believe he was trying to cheat but simply swapped parts in order to keep a bike running.
He would be excused for taking his bat & ball & never returning but to his credit he copped it on the chin & still turns up with a tandem full of bikes & rides his tits off.
PS, GMC yr pipes are very tastefully done, blending modern pipe designs w era-sympathetic lines extremely well in a way most of us would regard as entirely appropriate.
Thanks JC, your checks in the mail

While I like my pipes to look right, any rule that trys to ban fat pipes or tapered headers would just be a pain in the arse, not just to me but also riders & scrutineers. Who's going to be able to measure a pipe on raceday to decide where the header ends & the diffuser begins. The 250 Elsinore had a very advanced pipe for it's day with a tapered header & multi stage diffuser.