International Motor Contest Association

The International Motor Contest Association (IMCA) was organized in 1915 by J. Alex Sloan, and is currently the oldest active auto racing sanctioning body in the United States. IMCA is currently headquartered in Vinton, Iowa, and features several classes and divisions of weekly racing in six geographical regions of the United States.

IMCA Modified
IMCA Stock Car
IMCA Hobby Stocks
IMCA Northern SportMod
IMCA Southern SportMod
IMCA Sprint Car
IMCA Sport Compact

Classes of cars sectioned by the IMCA

  • IMCA ModifiedModified race cars with open wheels in the front and closed wheels in the back
  • IMCA Latemodel – full-bodied late model race cars
  • IMCA RaceSaver Sprint Car – traditional 305 non-winged and winged sprint cars
  • IMCA Stock Car – full-bodied production stock cars
  • IMCA Hobby Stock – 8-cylinder rear wheel drive entry-level division
  • IMCA Northern Sport Modified – same as modifieds but with smaller engines and more restrictive rules
  • IMCA Southern Sport Modified – Similar to Modified but with full GM Metric Frame
  • IMCA Sport Compact – 4-cylinder front wheel drive stock cars

Major races

The IMCA championships are held annually at the IMCA Super Nationals at Boone Speedway in Boone, Iowa. Another major race is the Harris Clash held at the Deer Creek Speedway in Spring Valley, Minnesota which was developed as a race with somewhat of an emphasis on chassis manufacturers. The IMCA Super Nationals is the biggest event held by IMCA. It happens once a year during the first week of September. This event has the most IMCA drivers in one event.

Trivia

The 1963 and 1964 IMCA champion, Dick Hutcherson, was not eligible for the 1965 NASCAR Grand National Series Rookie of the Year, which he won nine times and finished second in the standings; it was given to Sam McQuagg. NASCAR's rookie standards have since changed to being based only on the NASCAR Cup Series.

Images

gollark: As the sole GPS server, it is trivial to use exactly the same maths to determine where a client is when they ping (since CC GPS, unlike in reality, works by having clients ping the server when they want a fix).
gollark: Plus all kinds of weird error sources.
gollark: You get time *differences* in real life since the clocks aren't synced.
gollark: It's harder than that.
gollark: CC does this using the distance thing on modems.

References

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