The JCC Chairman recently distributed to a few of the executive council a suggestion from Michael K-O on some changes to the concours judging criteria and weighting of these criteria. Some discussion ensued via email from those copied. I have copied most of this here. The subject has been discussed a few times on JowettTalk but more comment would be welcomed. For example
here.
Jowett Car Club Concours
Proposed amendment to Concours marking system.
Pro
As a considered effort to simplify the concours judging list coming from the most authorative source
JCC has, its brevity is admirable.
Con
The level of marking per item is still a matter of the subjective view of the individual judge who does
not always have the necessary backup in unfamiliar areas.
In the past the prettiest & most unusual cars always wanted to be in the concours (primarily
D’Elegance) and the rest of us just brought our bangers to support the club and meet our friends.
There is a split in the aims of the concours, does prettiness or originality rule? The present system
seems to favour originality, but in the absence of a valid MOT and “drive to the rally” rule it favours
cheque book restorations & trailed cars over those taxed and proved by use for the journey to the
rally field.
As I have been involved with this side of JCC’s affairs may I put forward my own comments ?:-
Firstly we do not have enough judges or enough time to judge every attendee’s vehicle at an annual
rally. If we do not ask people in advance to enter their vehicle for concours those wishing to be
judged should be given a suitable windscreen card on registration at the hotel. Now having settled
which cars are to be judged against an accepted yardstick, who is available to judge them?
I feel that the membership list should be scrutinised by the executive committee and people
selected for knowledge & experience listed, and from which listing a suitable group should be
appointed that year’s judges. An “apprenticeship “system should be incorporated each year to
increase the size of the base group. While judges should never judge their own entries there
invaluable knowledge & experience must of necessity be used.
Sandra Purves
Awards coordinator
Dear all,
I recently attended the JOAC AGM and Concours judging which did things differently. Tom Chapman can explain. Tom also organised the judging at the Basingstoke rally so I was surprised he was not copied on the email from Geoff.
We do have a dilemma raised by Sandra concerning prettiness and originality and I also think there is one concerning mechanical soundness and use.
Sure we have a history and tradition but that should not mean we do not review the way things have been done to accommodate new goals that we set ourselves.
One goal we should set is to present cars that do show the design and technical nature of the cars as they came off the production line. Now these may well be museum pieces that cannot be driven on the road in future. But in my view they are crucial to understanding how things were.
An almost conflicting goal is to present cars to as many audiences as possible either through concours car shows against other marques where over restoration is prevalent.
Yet another conflicting goal is to encourage owners to use cars and take them to many events and use them every day which obviously means they are unlikely to win a prettiness concours against trailered 'cheque book' (if they are still used by those with money) restoration.
So considering the three goals of originality, prettiness and use we could either have separate competitions or amalgamate into one competition. Either way we need to say what criteria we use to judge and how we weight each criteria.
Originality could be simply judged by deducting one mark for each non-original part; but then somebody may argue that a non-original carburettor is of more value than a 10 cross head screws or ones that have been chromed or polished! Such criteria either need to be laid down or left at judges discretion. Personally I prefer the latter as rules will always be argued ad infinitum and only guidelines need to be issued. JOAC returned the judging forms back to the owners and explained why something was marked down. The important thing is that there is consistency from year to year, albeit allowing some change to accommodate anomalies or agreed and published criteria. Personally I consider the precision of the technical development of the mechanical components to be more important than the precision of date and model of the trim. But that is more difficult to judge. We could ask owners to list all the components they think are not original on their car and build this list up year by year for that car. A discussion between all the owners in the competition on the originality of each of their cars would obviate the need for judges and would encourage participation. Experts could be on hand (indeed they may be in the competition themselves) and in some way adjudicate on any issue.
Prettiness is not just aesthetic but should include panel fit and straightness, paint finish, chrome quality, and interior finish. But how far do you allow the restorer to go to create a deep gloss using modern paint or spruce up the engine bay or underside of the car? Is it important that there is some grease on the underside or oil in the engine compartment or that the seats and carpets show some wear? The danger here is that all of the criteria for prettiness favour the professional restoration and trailered car. How do you quantify prettiness? Interesting how the Jowett Juniors judged the cars or how a non-Jowett person judges them!
How do we encourage the amateur restoration and use of the car? Well we could ask owners to submit with their concours entry how the restoration was done and by whom. This would also develop knowledge of those who have skills that can be used by others hopefully improving our ability to get and keep cars on the road with improving standards and quality. Some criteria could be devised that encouraged the restoration by the current owner, for example triple points if he/she painted the car themselves.
Similarly use could be encouraged by people listing the mileage and events they have attended in the car. If this is kept from year to year for each car this could feed into a judging criteria that favours the used car over the trailered one. A simple scheme would be 1 point for each 100 miles travelled and 5 points for each event entered, perhaps 10 for a motorsport event.
I recently looked at the concours judging sheets issued over many years at JCC rallies in the 1980s an 90s. These formed part of the car's documentation. Such a build up of information on a car is useful and valuable to the current owner, future owners and the club. It is something the club should do.
As I said previously, we can either judge these areas of originality, prettiness and use separately or combine them.
Please let us not let go this opportunity and just do it as we have always done.......
--
Regards
Keith Clements
I felt uncomfortable about councours judging but then, I always do! My only direct experience was when the first and only time I put my FHC Jupiter into a concours. It was a Scottish JCC meeting and George Mitchell was judging.
My Jupiter had wheels cut down to 15" as when I put it on the road, tyres had just come into the MoT and there was a tyre famine, I was told 16" tyres are not available and may never be. remeber people drove on tyres until the canvas was showing!!
At the judging Goerge woulkd deduct one point for non-original fittings, I lost 4 points one for each wheel! I thought that pretty daft, was I going to drive the car with one 15" wheel and 3 x 16"??
As to carbs, I run 32ICHs on one Jupiter and 32IMPEs on the other. The cars run so much better in all respects than they ever could have done when they left te Factory brand new. Why deduct points for that?
Then we have the problem of added overdrive - I discovered that in 1953 Jowett were experimenting with overdrive for the Javelin. This was a separate unit within the propshaft, not a unit fixed to the rear of the gearbox like I have on my FHC Jupiter. Never a production item of vourse, but nearly so! As those of us who have overdrive know, it very positively transforms the car!
My pet hates are two
(1) wheels not the colour of the car
(2) Jaguar-type walnut on the SA instrument panel instead of the original type.
I would accept an alternator on a Jupiter if the rev counter (presumably electronic) was still working behind the original or original-looking faceplate.
Questions we may need to seriously address in the future are
what if a non-Jowett gearbox is fitted?
What if a non-Jowett engine is fitted?
Edmund Nankivell
Here is an extract from the JowettTalk discussion linked to above.
Chris Spencer » 11 Apr 2013 00:01
Although originality from the factory is an important factor when judging a vehicle it would be foolish to not accept that owners did carry out modifications to the cars in period - and it was not unusual to find cars that were a few years old have oil coolers fitted to them or maybe brake upgrades at later date by the fitting of a remote servo along with tow bars / wheel embellishers etc - two tone paint work was also popular throughout the 50's / 60's / 70's & 80's quite often a owner addition to the vehicle.
So if a owner has sensible modifications that deviate from a factory original car should the modifications be marked down, in my book most certainly not - this is part of the cars history - why mark it down ? If a Jowett van had sign writing down the side of it does it warrant being scored down ? because it did not leave the factory with the sign writing on it ! - but the sign writing is most certainly part of the vehicles history.
Has far as I am concerned providing the vehicle has not been turned into some custom mobile bling trinket wearing box on wheels the personal period modifications to the vehicles should be accepted - owners of the vehicles carried these out and it is an example of the period that the vehicle survived through - you would not see a concours judge scoring a Austin A35 down just because it has a steel sunroof visor fitted to it or a Ford Zephyr fitted with a Raymond Mays cylinder head.
The way forward in assisting the concours judges at our club events is to put together a judges guide for each model as already surgested- this needs to be more photographic than anything - lots of words attempting to describe which lamp the car should have fitted to the boot lid would be quite difficult to follow - a few words and an image of the rear of the car stating the changes through the years would very much do the job - then again it is easy to fall in to the trap - remember at the side of Ford / Vauxhall / Rover - Jowett was a small scale vehicle manufacture - it was not unusual to see overlaps - some vehicles were export KDC (knock down component) in other words they arrived in kits and were assembled upon arrival - interchange of parts did happen / some cars were accident repaired with later styles of panels & trim because the earlier parts were no longer available and it would be foolish to score down such trivial items - and please do not get me started on tool kits !!
Score the vehicle on what it is - allow for scoring on originality but equally so where a car has been restored and the owner has done the majority of the work also score on that fact.
Chris Spencer.