Could you give us some details as to what the judges look for, how a car is judged etc. I don't currently have any cars that could possibly hope to compete but I might be interested in building a future project from the ground up to concours standard, as long as I was given some idea as to what that standard entailed. In detail, down to how to weld panels together in a concours standard!
chickenjohn wrote:Could you give us some details as to what the judges look for, how a car is judged etc. I don't currently have any cars that could possibly hope to compete but I might be interested in building a future project from the ground up to concours standard, as long as I was given some idea as to what that standard entailed. In detail, down to how to weld panels together in a concours standard!
A full set of the MMOC Concours Rules & Regulations can now accessed by simply visiting the Members Area / Downloads / Concours. To get an idea of the standards, come over to the Concours area next time your at a regional or national rally. Remember though, to enter Concours at Merit level the car doesn't have to have been rebuilt to Grand Masters standards
Thanks Judge, we don;t have any concours in the Kent area. I downloaded the regulations last year and it said how the judging was to be carried out and what the owner and judge were supposed to do etc but did not cover any details as to what exactly is judged on the car itself. Where points are lost etc.
Simply put, the car is divided into four areas, exterior, interior, engine bay and underside. Each section is judged for a timed period of eight minutes, with attention to detail, originality, condition etc.
Concours has been referred to as 'spit & polish' but in fact overpolishing can result in downmarking, as any entrant will tell you. It is accepted that a totally individually rebuilt car will sometimes be in a better condition than when it left the factory, but if this is taken to extremes it can reduce the actual marks achieved. Whereas originality can increase the marks given.
Points are lost for excessive overpolishing. What must be remembered is that the finish after years of polishing does become smoother and shinier, and what we are looking for is a car that looks as close to its 'just left the factory' look as possible. However a certain amount of overpolishing is permissible.
Quite right. The document isn't on the server, and I've mailed Jon (it's his area) to see if he knows anything about it. Will post as soon as it's sorted out.
Disappeared during the last server hack, I'm afraid. I've contacted Bill for a new copy, and it will be posted ASAP. CJ, there are free progs that read .doc for the Mac, but I'll have a go at PDFing it too.