I have said this before but I like to hear myself talk so I'll say it again. I believe that 'Vintage Motocross' is not about riding a bike that's 20 years old (or 15, or 30 or whatever). It seems to me that it's celebrating that particular time in motocross when it was evolving from a run what ya brung road bike to specialist off road bikes. The machines were often spindly poor handling things, but they were all short travel things. 7/4. The commonly accepted cutoff is 1975, simply because after that, we had a sustained period of real evolution that continued until 1990, took a short break, and began again in about 1998/2000 with substantially improved suspensions and four stroke engines.
I would really like to see this concept of 'vintage MX' recognised, even enshrined. I think we need different class names for the later stuff. If we must have year classes (and I don't even agree with that to be honest), then sure, have them within the broad 'era' structure.
I can't remember what I wrote last time, but I think I said that Vintage is Pre 75.
Then we have 'Evolution' - 1976 to let's say 1980-ish - ie drum brakes, twin shocks, air-cooled, not pre 75.
After that we have the trend to discs, water cooling and so on. What could we call that? I've proposed 80sMX and even toyed with getting a website going (which fell through cos I am too busy with this one!).
So, we'd have Vintage, Evo, and 80sMX. How easy is that? You can have year cutoffs in that if you wish, but as Pre75 slowly withers due to age/interest/costs/bad hair days, perhaps something more likely to encourage larger turnouts would be worth considering.
Evo and 80sMX could use rules more in keeping with the technology than strict years. It shouldn't have to be about making sure it's a level playing field so the fast guys can win fairly. It should be about encouraging more riders to get out there and enjoy riding an old bike. I am never going to win anything but I love racing my '75 RM125 in whatever class it fits, even ACT's weird 'Old School' class. It's about having plenty of interesing bikes to look at. You only have to look at a Pre75 125cc dirt track class to see what technical superiority does to a class...
In 80sMX, we may not even need to use a Pre85 or a pre90 concept. Smarter minds than me could suggest what could be used. But then again, we could stick with existing year cutoffs.
And just because we already have rules in place that specify year cutoffs doesn't mean we can't throw the lot out and start again. Lordy, surely we aren't that unbending?
As for race meets, I'd rather see fewer regular events that focus on the eras along with a few biggies for all classes. It'd make for more and better riding, keep rider numbers up, and encourage a more era sympathetic atmosphere. Speaking of HEAVEN, imagine a HEAVEN 'Vintage' meet at Bulahdelah, or even say... Rockley, that is purely Pre 75. And imagine that it isn't about endless classes filled with three bikes droning around, but combines classes in to say Clubman and Expert for the year classes - Pre 75, Pre 70 and Pre 65. Why, you might have full grids of magnificent old bikes ripping around the track. Fast guys way out in front, but in the pack blokes on TM125s mixing it with guys on YZ250s and Bully Pursangs. How much more interesting to watch and fun to be part of? And just imagine a full on 80sMX day at Canberra? No sluggy old shitbox TMs and CR250s with thei dumb low pipes to get in the road of everyone tearing around on sparkling 84 CR250s and 88 YZ250s... Sounds good to me.
Lastly, with this in mind, we might all loosely call any old dirt bike 'Vintage', and we might talk about VMX as a catchall for what we do, but Vintage in its true, unambiguous, unarguable way would be Pre 75. And that's that.
PS I also like some of Rick Doughty's ideas as in the interview on McCook's site...
http://www.mccookracing.com/interviews/rickDoughty.htm
For example: Evo 1 or Pre78 encompasses the early long travel bikes that really hadn’t figured it all out yet. Evo2- is what I call the “original recipe” because it is what we started with; air-cooled, drum brake and no linkage. Evo 3- is the pre-disc brake era (the introduction of disc brakes is a huge advancement). Evo 4- is Pre-90. Decade is anything 10 years old and older.