Hi Keith,
Every GT40 and Cobra I know of can be had in turnkey minus or turnkey form. So that isn't a distinct enough attribute to distinguish something as a kit or production.
Here is my own personal definition and I think the SCCA is using something similar:<o

></o

>
If the manufacturer of "the car" requires the owner to title the car because that said manufacturer does not undergo EPA testing, crash testing, and so on then "the car" is a kit car. <o

></o

>
That definition would include every Cobra or GT40 that I know of sold in the US. All the GT40s discussed on this forum, save the original cars, are all titled in the US the same way, as self-builts, etc. and the law views them as kit cars. I'm pretty sure the Shelby Cobras, that is the current production glass and fiberglass Cobras, are kit cars as far as the law is concerned. I know that might make some folks unhappy to hear that used in conjunction with certain cars, but in most states as far as the law goes if you have to procure a title for the car and so on then it is a kit car.
Anyhow, have to read the fast track more when I have time to see what is happening on the kit car front and the SCCA. This has been one category of cars the SCCA has been slow to adoptor do anything with. NASA was quick to adopt some classes for kit cars but they didn't do well as I recall. NASA just has too damn many classes and "Spec series of the month" stuff going on. Heard of Spec Focus and Spec Mini? Well, they were once NASA spec classes that have died off along with Honda Challenge (in most places) and others.
I don't know what the SCCA was thinking when it moved to Topeka. They moved there, put a lot of money into the crappy Heartland park track, held the Runoffs there for a couple of years, and now that so many people hate the track the Runoffs are moving to Road America. I sent the SCCA a population density map along with my last license renewal to graphically illustrate that:
a) They are in the middle of nowhere.
and
b) Most of the population of the US lives within about 150-200 miles of the coastline. The SCCA should locate in a population center.
"Thank you for your input". was what I got back.
<o

></o

>