Well, I was there this morning. Don't take this as the official report of the new Chief Judge, or anything, but I just experienced what I'm about to report, and it is to the best of my knowledge, having been there and spoken to Steve Dawdy and Steve Slocumbe at length about it.
The new Chief Judge of the AMCA is Steve Dawdy, of Iowa. There is a new judging regime in place in the Antique Motorcycle Club of America. I have no other information about what led to this change, but it's done.
Steve himself was not informed by the AMCA Board of Directors that it was all final until late on Saturday afternoon, explaining why it wasn't mentioned to those of us who sat in the Judge's meeting at the Eustis Fairgrounds yesterday.
There are some new, stricter rules in place, which were first placed in effect at Eustis, the first meet of the 2010 meet season, and I expect they will improve the products of our judging system. We used the new system this morning, and a couple of surprises resulted. More about them later.
The AMCA judging sheet has listed 25 logical categories for years, since the 1990s, to be judged for each bike, counting up to 4 points each, things like: "engine," "front end," "hardware and fasteners," and "Instruments and Speedometer." They are still the break down in the same 25 categories, but three of those categories may now be deducted up to six points: "Paint," "Engine" and "Frame." The concept is based on "High Visibility Parts," which can have up to six points deducted as "Incorrect Parts."
The explanation for this is the recent influx of major reproduction items, "repops," and to limit antique motorcycles built around major repops from rising to the "Winner's Circle" (and therefore being toutable as exemplary representatives of their year and type: certifying them, in a way, that they are "as manufactured").
This means that a bike built around, for instance, an accurate, but repopped Harley frame (think: those near-accurate repop frames from Australia) that does not bear the correct casting numbers and hallmarks will have a six point deduction for "incorrect frame." Forever after, the maximum number of points that bike, with that frame, can ever score is 94 points, even if the rest of the bike is 'perfect.'
To make Senior First, a restoration must win a Junior Award, a Junior Second (at least 85 points), or a Junior First (90 points) to be considered for an AMCA Senior Award (needs to earn only one Junior, then a Senior, of 95 or more points) before being brought to one more meet, where it must score at least 95 points "again," to win the prestigious (read: "$$$") "example of the breed" award: "AMCA Winner's Circle of Excellence." That amounts to a certification of near-perfection as an example of that year and model motorcycle.
The reasoning behind this is simply to prevent someone who acquires, for instance, a 1910 Harley motor, or less, or a whole repop bike (yes, they are just now coming available: to the last nut and bolt) for about $10-grand, from doing a couple of cosmetic changes to the bike and presenting it as a "real" 1910 Harley. The only thing missing from the 100% repop 1910, reportedly, is the name "Harley-Davidson" cast on the crankcase. A "real" 1910 Harley trades in the $90-100,000 range. So you can see the dilemma faced by the AMCA, which accepts reproduction parts, as a necessity to complete our old bikes, but declines to certify a completely fake bike as "exemplary of the year and model."
There's more to come. Let me collect my thoughts.
__________________
The new Chief Judge of the AMCA is Steve Dawdy, of Iowa. There is a new judging regime in place in the Antique Motorcycle Club of America. I have no other information about what led to this change, but it's done.
Steve himself was not informed by the AMCA Board of Directors that it was all final until late on Saturday afternoon, explaining why it wasn't mentioned to those of us who sat in the Judge's meeting at the Eustis Fairgrounds yesterday.
There are some new, stricter rules in place, which were first placed in effect at Eustis, the first meet of the 2010 meet season, and I expect they will improve the products of our judging system. We used the new system this morning, and a couple of surprises resulted. More about them later.
The AMCA judging sheet has listed 25 logical categories for years, since the 1990s, to be judged for each bike, counting up to 4 points each, things like: "engine," "front end," "hardware and fasteners," and "Instruments and Speedometer." They are still the break down in the same 25 categories, but three of those categories may now be deducted up to six points: "Paint," "Engine" and "Frame." The concept is based on "High Visibility Parts," which can have up to six points deducted as "Incorrect Parts."
The explanation for this is the recent influx of major reproduction items, "repops," and to limit antique motorcycles built around major repops from rising to the "Winner's Circle" (and therefore being toutable as exemplary representatives of their year and type: certifying them, in a way, that they are "as manufactured").
This means that a bike built around, for instance, an accurate, but repopped Harley frame (think: those near-accurate repop frames from Australia) that does not bear the correct casting numbers and hallmarks will have a six point deduction for "incorrect frame." Forever after, the maximum number of points that bike, with that frame, can ever score is 94 points, even if the rest of the bike is 'perfect.'
To make Senior First, a restoration must win a Junior Award, a Junior Second (at least 85 points), or a Junior First (90 points) to be considered for an AMCA Senior Award (needs to earn only one Junior, then a Senior, of 95 or more points) before being brought to one more meet, where it must score at least 95 points "again," to win the prestigious (read: "$$$") "example of the breed" award: "AMCA Winner's Circle of Excellence." That amounts to a certification of near-perfection as an example of that year and model motorcycle.
The reasoning behind this is simply to prevent someone who acquires, for instance, a 1910 Harley motor, or less, or a whole repop bike (yes, they are just now coming available: to the last nut and bolt) for about $10-grand, from doing a couple of cosmetic changes to the bike and presenting it as a "real" 1910 Harley. The only thing missing from the 100% repop 1910, reportedly, is the name "Harley-Davidson" cast on the crankcase. A "real" 1910 Harley trades in the $90-100,000 range. So you can see the dilemma faced by the AMCA, which accepts reproduction parts, as a necessity to complete our old bikes, but declines to certify a completely fake bike as "exemplary of the year and model."
There's more to come. Let me collect my thoughts.
__________________
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