April 6: Hornets Nest Region AACA show . . .
Read MoreI woke up to some dreary weather on Saturday morning and hoped for the best as I headed to the speedway for the Hornets Nest AACA show. At that moment, I was looking at upper 50s and a lot of cloud cover. But with the amount of walking I was going to do, I knew I wouldn't have to worry about keeping warm. Shorts and a Jaguar t-shirt would be the rule for the day. And since mid-70s were forecast to arrive by the early afternoon, the coat could stay in the car.
It's been seven years since I last attended an event of this nature. But I knew I would be doing A LOT of walking. Warmth would not be a problem once the exercise began. Armed with one pair of good walking shoes, a 64GB memory card, and three fully charged camera batteries, I hit the show field.All vehicles registered for an AACA show are assigned a class. There is something here for everyone (I counted 133 available classes in the 2019 AACA Judging Guidelines manual). Classes are divided into two categories.
The majority of classes fall into the first category of Competition Judged Classes where vehicles are evaluated according to a points system. The objective is to evaluate an antique vehicle that, "has been restored to the same state as the dealer could have prepared the vehicle for delivery to the customer." The emphasis here is on an authentic restoration.
A handful of classes fall into the second judging category of Certification Classes. These vehicles are not point judged, but evaluated according to specific AACA guidelines.
The first two classes I encountered today were from the Certification Classes category. Historic Preservation of Original Features (HPOF) is a class for cars that have been preserved rather than restored. I've also seen this class referred to as a "preservation" or "survivor" class. According to the AACA Judging Guidelines manual, this class was created "to encourage the saving and display of collector vehicles in their original, as manufactured, condition."1978 Lincoln Continental.
It didn't take long for me to realize that a lot of the HPOF cars don't match my mental image of an "antique" car, even though they are. The AACA defines an "antique" car as one more than 25 years old. So as hard as it is for me to believe, anything manufactured in 1994 or earlier is considered an antique.
This 1978 Lincoln Continental is one of my favorites, and one that I would own as a driver in a heartbeat. But try as I might, I just can't see it as an antique, even though basic math says it is. This would be a recurring theme throughout this class and the DPC class which we'll get to later.