Re: ?Changes to the TIM & JG?
The difference is that you have the history on your car as original and could argue the case if need be. You also stated "MOST of the judges", but that is the rub, not all judges, and that is exactly what can get a person.
You were also blessed with an original car that also mirrored typical factory production. If your original car didn't, you would have been dinged more than those one or two points along the way.
While at the Hilton at Kissimmee a few years back, I heard a judge/instructor tell a group he had about a part on a '66 convertible that was wrong. The owner happened to be there, and stated that not only was it right, it was original. The judge insisted it was wrong and had been changed. The owner said he was the original owner and the item had never been changed.
Few people have that authority to state something is not only right, but original because they have owned it since day 1![i] So for most people, they would have lost those points.
Also, not everyone has the opportunity to own one complete, untouched, and intact like yours. Many have some sections that have been changed, usually hoses, clamps, filters, and so on at least. So while some areas have to be restored to TFP or NCRS, others areas may still be original, yet can get nailed because since the owners have changed/restored some areas, they do not have the weight to carry as if the whole car had been untouched when it comes to items the judges believe wrong.
I have the PV and judging sheets on a '62. Nothing on there was a major issue. A washer that wasn't needed. A heater hose slightly too long. Everything was a point here, a point there. Yet 98 points were deducted. Had there been a major issue somewhere, the points would have added up fast.
I'm not saying it is impossible, just harder. If you want to win at anything, you have to follow the rules to the letter and decide what you can bend or not bend. No way can you play by a different set of rules and expect to win completely.
And that is what this is. To ensure your Top Flight, you comply with everything in the judging manual. If you want to chance it, stay how the car came from the factory untouched. In your case, they matched.
You didn't mention your scores, not that you need to. But were there some areas that you could have gotten more points and a higher score if you followed the judging manual rather than leave it original? Of course, that would have messed up the Bowtie.
The difference is that you have the history on your car as original and could argue the case if need be. You also stated "MOST of the judges", but that is the rub, not all judges, and that is exactly what can get a person.
You were also blessed with an original car that also mirrored typical factory production. If your original car didn't, you would have been dinged more than those one or two points along the way.
While at the Hilton at Kissimmee a few years back, I heard a judge/instructor tell a group he had about a part on a '66 convertible that was wrong. The owner happened to be there, and stated that not only was it right, it was original. The judge insisted it was wrong and had been changed. The owner said he was the original owner and the item had never been changed.
Few people have that authority to state something is not only right, but original because they have owned it since day 1![i] So for most people, they would have lost those points.
Also, not everyone has the opportunity to own one complete, untouched, and intact like yours. Many have some sections that have been changed, usually hoses, clamps, filters, and so on at least. So while some areas have to be restored to TFP or NCRS, others areas may still be original, yet can get nailed because since the owners have changed/restored some areas, they do not have the weight to carry as if the whole car had been untouched when it comes to items the judges believe wrong.
I have the PV and judging sheets on a '62. Nothing on there was a major issue. A washer that wasn't needed. A heater hose slightly too long. Everything was a point here, a point there. Yet 98 points were deducted. Had there been a major issue somewhere, the points would have added up fast.
I'm not saying it is impossible, just harder. If you want to win at anything, you have to follow the rules to the letter and decide what you can bend or not bend. No way can you play by a different set of rules and expect to win completely.
And that is what this is. To ensure your Top Flight, you comply with everything in the judging manual. If you want to chance it, stay how the car came from the factory untouched. In your case, they matched.
You didn't mention your scores, not that you need to. But were there some areas that you could have gotten more points and a higher score if you followed the judging manual rather than leave it original? Of course, that would have messed up the Bowtie.
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