Hi guys
Don't mean to stir trouble:), but here's something that's bugged me since I first really encountered it last year:
Do I understand the concept of max lateness correctly? If you're (at OWR for example) 30minutes off your predicted time, you're invisible to the rally, and have to hurry to 'catch up', even though that'll mean being early at at least one (or usually more) of your next checkpoints?
I'm having trouble bending my mind around this one, as it seems contrary to all the spirit of safety and sanity that I trully appreciate of the rally community. Take an event like OWR, and a newbie like myself (at least I recognize limits of my skills, which mostly keeps me out of too much of trouble:)). We promote safety and laws; in fact you're never ever supposed to drive over your limits or over the speed limit. But hit those magic 30 minutes (which isn't usually a problem in navexes but is ridiculously easy on an event 9 hours long, especially if we get weather like at Jaunt), and everybody sort of looks the other way, hey no pressure, but catch up,
somehow, and we won't ask questions?? (even though CAS is usually only 10% under speed limit, and one has to drive significantly faster to catch up)
If the only reason this rule is implemented is to alleviate the workload on the checkpoint crews, I can't imagine after hours of waiting, another, say 15 minutes would make much of a difference, but extending that to 45 minutes for example would increase the limit by 50% to participants!
I understand drivexes are meant to be more challenging of course, but I'm still in favour of reasonable learning curves, and there
is a beginner's category still. There's enough room in intermediate & expert to be unforgiving

. Plus, events like Lanark have successfully ran with "forgivness time pool" (I forget the exact name) for Beginner's category, which seems to have worked well in the past, and certainly enabled us to drive to our limits...
I guess I'm just unused to the extreme and sudden pressure to go faster then reasonable, in tricky conditions, by people otherwise extremely commited to safety and driving within the limits...