Just got back from the Manukau Winch Challenge and had a total BLAST
I'm all fired up about the Wheel Spin rule's, so while I'm in that mood, would be interested to start a debate and get everyone's interpretations of it out there
The rules that I'm curious about are:

To me, the rule's are not clear cut enough for the Marshals to be able to do a fair job.
I would hate to be in their situation.
"In the marshals view" means its their call, so they have to make a decision on the spot.
They have to some how decided, on the spot, if you are cutting the track up unfairly for the trailing competitors.
According to the rule, if the Marshal decides the wheel spin is excessive, you must commence winching after the hooter has been sounded once.
Sooooo, my questions are:
Where the hell did this warning blast of the horn that we seem to get come from and what does it mean??
If you are a marshal on the spot, how do you tell if the track is being cut up unfairly, or if the track is being cut up fairly??
Is it 5 seconds of wheel spin and sound the hooter, so the competitor has to commence winching??
Is it wheel spin untill the vehicle has stopped moving, then sound the hooter to prevent the vehicle from digging holes??
Then there's the "Deemed Stuck" rule.
Loss of traction and forward momentum is what the rule say's
Thats nice and clean cut.
Couple that with the wheel spin rule, and you have interesting situation.
Take a senario for example:
One stage we did we were first up on it, it hadn't been driven yet buy anyone, not even during track setting.
The stage was up hill through a spring fed swamp approx 100m in length, the start box back on the hard slippery clay.
Right on "GO" is the big clutch dump in 3rd low, heaps of wheel spin , heaps of rev's, heaps of mud flying, and that didn't stop until i crossed the swamp and hit the clay bank at the far end and had to winch.
During that whole time, i heard the hooter go at least twice, if not more, over noise in the cab.
The first was as my rear wheels entered the swamp and the rooster tails started.
According to the rule, i should have stopped right there and winched.
According to the apparent Marshal practice, it was just a warning??
Either way I wasn't going to button off. If i had i would have sunk and had to winch through the swamp. That would have cost time. Considering the competition is against the clock, that wouldn't have been sensible as winching is a lot slower than driving something.
The rest of the trucks in our group were a lot heavier and got only a 3rd of the way through the swamp before they sunk and had to winch.
Its much the same as spinning your wheels all the way up a hill, but making the hill climb with out having to winch, versus spinning your wheels all the way up a hill and being pulled up for excessive wheel spin, forcing you to winch when you otherwise would have driven the hill.
I say that, as I ignored the marshals hooter for excessive wheel spin serveral different time's midway up a hill. I had plenty of wheel spin going on, but the vehicle was still moving forwards fairly rapidly, and was still climbing the hill nicely, but they wanted me to stop and winch for some reason.
Fair enough if the vehicle clearly isn't going to make the hill climb and is just making a mess and digging holes, but at least wait untill that point.

I would like to know the proper interpretation of the that rule, and exactly how the marshal's are told and are going police it in the future.
As it stands at the moment you might as well hook your winch on from the start box
Looking forward to a good constructive discussion on this one folks
