FstCavZ24 wrote:I'd figure the stroker motor would put you out of STS.
Club 136! (OG Nick) wrote:
As for your current setup, you are in the wrong class. In STS, you MUST use the stock cat, in the stock location. Many people agree that this is a stupid rule, and therefore many regions may allow, or turn a blind eye towards people using replacement cats, or maybe even hi-flow cats. I know I have been pushing my luck with my replacement cat for a while now. Just figured I would let you know, not that anyone would suspect your cat being gutted anyway.
Kardain wrote:FstCavZ24 wrote:I'd figure the stroker motor would put you out of STS.
you know, I honestly missed that part.
Club 136! (OG Nick) wrote:
As for your current setup, you are in the wrong class. In STS, you MUST use the stock cat, in the stock location. Many people agree that this is a stupid rule, and therefore many regions may allow, or turn a blind eye towards people using replacement cats, or maybe even hi-flow cats. I know I have been pushing my luck with my replacement cat for a while now. Just figured I would let you know, not that anyone would suspect your cat being gutted anyway.
A counterpoint, the EPA recommends replacement of the cat after 8 years or 80k miles, whichever comes first. Given that there are OEM equivalents as far as cats go, that rule can be hard to enforce should one replace the it
Airtonics wrote:Kardain wrote:FstCavZ24 wrote:I'd figure the stroker motor would put you out of STS.
you know, I honestly missed that part.
Club 136! (OG Nick) wrote:
As for your current setup, you are in the wrong class. In STS, you MUST use the stock cat, in the stock location. Many people agree that this is a stupid rule, and therefore many regions may allow, or turn a blind eye towards people using replacement cats, or maybe even hi-flow cats. I know I have been pushing my luck with my replacement cat for a while now. Just figured I would let you know, not that anyone would suspect your cat being gutted anyway.
A counterpoint, the EPA recommends replacement of the cat after 8 years or 80k miles, whichever comes first. Given that there are OEM equivalents as far as cats go, that rule can be hard to enforce should one replace the it
Correct, you can replace it with an OEM cat and that's acceptable however you can't use an after market stock replacement or an upgraded high flow cat. The biggest issue is the OEM cats are very expensive (often over $600+) or sometimes discontinued. It's still a rule and at a national level it could be an item to protest.
RedZ, I"m sure if he had it someone would know. Either he'd tell someone and they'd blab or at a national level if you're competing and placing in a car that normally doesn't place. They could look further into it and even tear your engine down if it was in question. Nationals is a big deal but it's unlikely a cav could ever compete with the hondas that rule the STS class.
Quote:
15.11 OUT-OF-PRODUCTION CARS
Where a car is out of production and the manufacturer is either out
of business, stocks no parts or no longer has a required part, a part
of any origin but as similar as possible to the original may be
substituted. The entrant must be prepared to show documentary
evidence that one of the three circumstances above applies and that
the substituted part is as similar as possible under the
circumstances. Substitute parts which provide improvements in
performance (e.g. superior gearing, lighter weight, better camshaft
profile, etc.) are not permitted under this allowance.