So, the whole purpose of round one was to reveal what photographic or video evidence can or cannot show us. In the case of ASH Grass Lake, it proved one person innocent.
We all know there have been cases where calls have been made or not made, only to have visual evidence in the form of photos or videos refute the decision.
We live in an age where there is a video camera on the shoreline, in our phones, on a driver's helmet. Digital photography abounds at most race sites from numerous vantage points. Technology that didn't exist 3-5 years ago is commonplace now at our races, in the form of Mychron 4's, Go-Pro Cameras, GPS units and more. We've done a great job in many cases of embracing that technology to our advantage in some instances, and in others we cling to the dark ages school of thought because "that's the way we've always done it."
At present, APBA does not allow photographic/video evidence to be used in an appeal or protest, except in the OPC category. I've mentioned this to people who race in other motorsports, and they give me THAT look: you know, the 'you gotta be sh!tting me!' look.
So, my question to all you experts, wanna-be experts, and keyboard racers out there:
Is it time for APBA to consider allowing videos and/or photos to be allowed in the protest/appeal process? Why, or why not. And if your answer is yes, how would you implement it?
Fire away,
R-19
We all know there have been cases where calls have been made or not made, only to have visual evidence in the form of photos or videos refute the decision.
We live in an age where there is a video camera on the shoreline, in our phones, on a driver's helmet. Digital photography abounds at most race sites from numerous vantage points. Technology that didn't exist 3-5 years ago is commonplace now at our races, in the form of Mychron 4's, Go-Pro Cameras, GPS units and more. We've done a great job in many cases of embracing that technology to our advantage in some instances, and in others we cling to the dark ages school of thought because "that's the way we've always done it."
At present, APBA does not allow photographic/video evidence to be used in an appeal or protest, except in the OPC category. I've mentioned this to people who race in other motorsports, and they give me THAT look: you know, the 'you gotta be sh!tting me!' look.
So, my question to all you experts, wanna-be experts, and keyboard racers out there:
Is it time for APBA to consider allowing videos and/or photos to be allowed in the protest/appeal process? Why, or why not. And if your answer is yes, how would you implement it?
Fire away,
R-19
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