(Edit: I meant: New "Judging Guidelines Manual")
I just came home from Eustis (thirty long miles!), where I once again participated in the Sunday morning judging.
Clete Borchert, "Old Dude," of Lilburn, Georgia, was the biggest vendor set up inside the big building yesterday; he had a spread of tables loaded with all of his boxes of tasty little one-of-a-kind special Harley hardware bits. (He has my vote!) (Whatever he runs for!) Clete keeps thousands of us on the road and in the restoration hobby with all those little jewels, easily accessible at very fair prices. But, anyway, Clete was packed up and gone today, moved on to wherever he sets up for the rest of Bike Week over Daytona-way.
With all that open gymnasium-sized floor space, Chief Judge Steve Dawdy made the call, and Sunday judging was held indoors this year. The Judges' Breakfast was at its usual 8 am, and the formal judging started at 9. I just want to publicly applaud Chief Judge Dawdy for great the job he's done, bringing AMCA judging into the 21st Century in this last year.
One of his latest milestones was publishing a new Judging Guidelines Manual (downloadable off this AMCA website). I think it's great! He and the judging team have quantified and "regularized" the things, like "how many points off for... ?" this or that, in each of the 25 categories on our hundred-point judging sheet. And they answered age-old questions like, specifically: "what's the difference between an 'option' and an 'accessory?'" It's all 'in the book,' now, easily referenced, and it makes the jobs of both the restorers and judges a helluva lot easier, as a result of their helluva lotta work.
Each judging team had a bound, hard-copy of the new Judging Guidelines Manual in our hands as we assigned numbers to the discrepencies that we had already noted on our inspections of the bikes, and I was glad to see that we finally have a standard we can refer to for every quarter-point, half-point and up to six point (for repop frame) deduction. Just reading the new Manual should eliminate most of the nit-picky conflicts and arguments and appeals we used to go through, over-and-over. Today, "it's in the book." Thanks, Steve, and Judging Rules Team! I like the job you're doing.
I just came home from Eustis (thirty long miles!), where I once again participated in the Sunday morning judging.
Clete Borchert, "Old Dude," of Lilburn, Georgia, was the biggest vendor set up inside the big building yesterday; he had a spread of tables loaded with all of his boxes of tasty little one-of-a-kind special Harley hardware bits. (He has my vote!) (Whatever he runs for!) Clete keeps thousands of us on the road and in the restoration hobby with all those little jewels, easily accessible at very fair prices. But, anyway, Clete was packed up and gone today, moved on to wherever he sets up for the rest of Bike Week over Daytona-way.
With all that open gymnasium-sized floor space, Chief Judge Steve Dawdy made the call, and Sunday judging was held indoors this year. The Judges' Breakfast was at its usual 8 am, and the formal judging started at 9. I just want to publicly applaud Chief Judge Dawdy for great the job he's done, bringing AMCA judging into the 21st Century in this last year.
One of his latest milestones was publishing a new Judging Guidelines Manual (downloadable off this AMCA website). I think it's great! He and the judging team have quantified and "regularized" the things, like "how many points off for... ?" this or that, in each of the 25 categories on our hundred-point judging sheet. And they answered age-old questions like, specifically: "what's the difference between an 'option' and an 'accessory?'" It's all 'in the book,' now, easily referenced, and it makes the jobs of both the restorers and judges a helluva lot easier, as a result of their helluva lotta work.
Each judging team had a bound, hard-copy of the new Judging Guidelines Manual in our hands as we assigned numbers to the discrepencies that we had already noted on our inspections of the bikes, and I was glad to see that we finally have a standard we can refer to for every quarter-point, half-point and up to six point (for repop frame) deduction. Just reading the new Manual should eliminate most of the nit-picky conflicts and arguments and appeals we used to go through, over-and-over. Today, "it's in the book." Thanks, Steve, and Judging Rules Team! I like the job you're doing.
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