Buckshot
I understood what you were saying. First thing off the bat, the MALS really don't need to import competition. They have a good product to sell. In their heydays go-karts where everywhere, because they were cheap easy to work on store and haul. Mini sprints are the same type race car. We raced go-karts and those things got to be real expensive real real expensive to those that drank all the Kool-Aid that was being sold to them.
It takes a special racer to race an open wheel car or to put their loved ones in one to race. These things are perceived and rightfully so as dangerous. They lack the fenders roofs and extra frame work that make stock cars and even E mods appear safe to the average fan.
I am a purist, that means I like things as they have always been. I race open wheel because I think it is the only pure form of racing. When I put Doug in the Beast for his first race we had a long discussion about how to respect other racers and his race car. To race an open wheel car competitive requires an exceptional driver. They have to do all the things a fendered race driver does, just as close or closer and never touch. I like to think of it as honest racing. You can't just go in a turn and lean on the other racer to negotiate the turn, You have to drive in wheel to wheel and avoid contact at all times. The video posted by Collin Ambrose show what happens when one driver or another make a 6" mistake in judging what his car is capable of doing.
We have to work on cost both the race car and now even travel expenses if these things are to take off. Although I don't mind being part of an exclusive minority in the racing world.
1. Don't put so much importance of the caliber race track you race on. We raced at a little 1/4 mile track in south eastern Ohio, named "Brown County Raceway". It sat on top of a big old hill in the middle of a cow pasture. To this day that is the best race track we have ever raced on. The promoter made us his A Class, the purse was great, the track stayed racy all night long and his grand stands were always full.
2. If you are serious about keeping racing on the cheap, stay away from them big fast joints. That is what happened to USAC midget racing. It took so much Horsepower to win at these places that they segregated the racer by their pocket book. Kenny Brown, I would bet noticed this and with his PowerI Midgets he chose to keep to the smaller race tracks where Midgets were not too popular. PowerI is now a huge success story, and USAC has a hard time getting a full field of cars.
3. If you want to race in your division don't beat all of your fellow competitors. Enjoy the race but don't chase off you fellow racers. When it comes down to making calls stay out of the fight. Appoint what you and your fellow racers can perceive as neutral judges.
4. Remember that racers are people that like to tinker, leave them room to do this, try to design your races so that everyone attending think they have a chance to win. Watch out for people that win too much, better to handicap them than cause other racers to not show up to race.
5. Work on a tire company. Make it to where the racer can buy a spec tire from the club cheaper than any place else and put the small profit that is left in the points fund. Racers are funny people, most of them don't want to think that you are making a dime off of them, so in your tire deal don't make a dime. Next to the engine and travel tires are a racers biggest investment give them a deal. While you are at it only sell a nice hard tire that will last half the season and make those built motors useless as teats on a boar hog. Only sell the right rear tire. Don't try to run your tire dealer out of business, make a deal with him to pay a contingency to racer that win on all his brand of tire.
6. Times are hard, don't expect miracles, plan for the future, things tend to always get better with time.
Honest Dad himself

