well...I'll hijack my hijacked thread on this comment...
it takes a lot of time and research to understand all the nuances of these cars and its not something that can be covered in a book
Respectfully, this is the kind of comment in this hobby that kills me... and why I feel MCA is a fatally flawed organization.
Basically, this common refrain that "It is too hard to write down what I know is right"
Flame suit on... but I call BS.
A lot of data? Yes, of course. But for most that would indicate the need to document, not memorize?
Bob Mannel did a great job (in 1998) that shows it can be done. If he can do what he did for ~8 years of Ford small blocks, as an individual, ~15 years ago, it seems odd the MCA can't even come close to 1/10th (maybe 1/100th?) of the info he provided in written form to this day. Let alone he dug into engine internals and a lot of stuff most folks don't see, and most judging focuses on mainly the open and obvious.
After 35-ish years (don't recall exactly when MCA came to be, mid 70s'?) for the MCA to hold up a few pages of sketchy information in the open, and provide judging sheets that are seen as intellectual property with instructions not to distribute the forms and results? Corporation, not cooperation?
The view that "it is easier to remember all aspects of a few years of one car's details by tribal lore and oral history and regurgitation/rote than by writing it down"... ?? Really?
I'd suggest a few centuries supporting the small growth of documentation from the invention of the printing press, to encyclopedias, to web pages, to Wikipedia, etc. have shown oral histories are a bit weak as a formal source of documentation.
Not a popular opinion, for sure, but I'll stand by it.