Scrutineering of machines is a total can of worms. It opens up all sorts of legal and indeed ethical issues around personal and collective responsibility.
My contention is that the legality is very clear. In the entry form for contemporary race meetings there are clauses that state that when you, as a competitor, sign the form that your machine, and gear (at least it should also state gear) are both suitable for purpose, i.e. safe, and meet the regulations for the class of racing into which you are competing.
This introduces the personal responsibility.
If you are with mates or a team, or simply pitted next to a competitor, with a machine or gear that you know or find out is unfit or illegal then it behoves you to point this out to that competitor or the authorities of the meeting in an effort to repair/rectify said machine/gear.
This is the introduction of collective responsibility.
Too often we will say to ourselves or our mates that so and so's bike is not right, but do nothing about it, it's someone elses problem. This needs to change.
Duck shoving this responsibility onto already overworked volunteers who have no business becoming your scapegoats when your machine shits itself after a scrutineer told you it was OK when they are checking a machine with hands and eyes, not spanners and screwdrivers is simply unacceptable.
Sure, we are human and miss things sometimes, but it is your responsibility to ensure you miss as few things as possible, not the organisers. Leave plenty of time to prepare you machine accurately. It is not rocket science. But the collective responsibility includes the organisers too and having such things as random safety checks and gear checks at sign-in and/or on the dummy grid are where they can contribute to the collective (Roberts favourite form of political movement) by informing the individual.
Furthermore, I personally believe that issues such as poorly prepared and ineligible machines come down to education and then to the desire on the part of competitors to do the right thing. Believe it or not, there are plenty of competitors out there who actually do not want to do the right thing.
In other countries riders must pass a series of tests of various kinds before they can race at increasing levels. I don't know if these tests include machine preparation classes/modules but they should as it is just as important as any other component of racing.
I have stated previously, that I believe that road racing in NZ is at a crossroads right now where the introduction of graded and tested racing licences needs to occur.
You can wake up now, I've finished......
"Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." John Ono Lennon.
"If you have never stared off into the distance then your life is a shame." Counting Crows
"The girls were in tight dresses, just like sweets in cellophane" Joe Jackson
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