JeremyH
I wanna be Dave
The reason why this question came to my mind was because this was another way to look at the controversial 2012 BOTW "cave gate" that I judged all day long.
That will forever live on in infamy. :lol:
The reason why this question came to my mind was because this was another way to look at the controversial 2012 BOTW "cave gate" that I judged all day long.
That will forever live on in infamy. :lol:
The horizontal distance between two gate was about 8" in person.
I'll put this as clearly possible. If you take a string and connect the two cones/balls keeping the string on the rock is it 16" or greater? If yes, it is a legal gate.
Don't get caught up with floating, it doesn't apply in your gates scenario. The intent of the gate was to force you up the vertical wall in some way to clear the gates cleanly, so if the distance along the rock is 16" or greater it's legal.
I hope this helps, Fish will back me on this, and yes, I'm on the Rules Committee and I was a marshall/judge at BOTW as well.
You have 2 issues not 1.
If the gate is measured correctly it appears to be legal width, the problem start when drivers try to drive on a different angle than the gate is measured. From the photos it appears impossible to drive the line closer to horizontal.
As a judge I would have call it a penalty, and as a course designer I would have drawn a chalk line in the cave and not put a judge in that position.
Line 1 I would not penalize
Line 2 I would penalize because 4 tire did not travel between the gates
Moving the upper marker further away may have created a passable route on the top...... In the case of the gate in question, since the lower gate marker was the one creating the obstacle, and the upper gate marker was not a factor, the upper marker could have been moved further away to make an extra wide gate.
Why not just define "between" (while passing the gate) as "along the straight ground contour line between the markers"?Line 1 I would not penalize
Line 2 I would penalize because 4 tire did not travel between the gates
I don't get it. If I have two balls 8" apart, but a big rock ridge between them, the string connecting them while touching the rock might be 16" long. But the gate isn't 16" wide.
You are wrong. Cannot have progress clean or with a gate penalty if your still in the gate.
Car is still in the gate, no progress, no penalty................yet
stop looking for gray areas to bend the rules to your advantage. Anyways, drive your toy trucks guys, and try to have fun doing it!
If the truck from this position first goes straight to the side, leaving the gate markers, there's a 10p penalty for hitting one marker.... if they were in this position and drove straight over one of the balls, they would be awarded progress at that point? and at what point?
I think the only time we have called that "progress" was on a finish gate when time ran out but driver was still dinged a gate penalty on the call. If the driver didn't have the points to take the extra 10 then they got no progress for the gate.
I do understand what you are trying to say though. I think the reason it not being called progress in that situation is that the gate is not officially cleared at that time. Driver must get the other 2 tires through or take the gate penalty before the gate can be called cleared.
Car is still in the gate, no progress, no penalty................yet
same question, if the driver decides to straddle out of it.. at what point is it considered a progress and penalty?
In the middle of the course with clock still running the driver has to move or you will get a DNF 40 minus progress.
Once you leave the gate and did not get ALL 4 tire through after making progress its a penalty.
If its the last gate then...the course must be completed
4.8 - Course Completion: The course is finished once the last gate is completed and progress has been awarded (see rule 1.10)
If your sitting there in the last gate then its not completed.
Ok, but what's considered "completed" if the driver strattles the ball and basically drives straight to the side in this pic.?
You guys are all expressing opinions but not acknowledging the explicit written rule:
"Progress is awarded when during the same attempt and in the intended course direction at least one front and one rear tire passes completely through the gate."
The car in the sketch clearly meets that requirement. No where in that quoted sentence does it say "unless...".
For your opinions to be right (I believe they are), the rules have a hitch that should probably be corrected. At the very least the test should be changed because a technically right answer is called wrong.