This more a problem with the "flat earth society" (AHRMA)

than it is with most riders. If you look at what is going on in Texas, the Northwest, Florida, SVRG in California, you will see that Vintage and Post-Vintage are existing quite well together.
Here in Texas, Evo-Sports runs not only Vintage and Evo on the same day, we also have Modern Support and (the horror!) minis. Amazingly, no one has fallen off the end of the earth and no world-ending lawsuits have been filed. You know, we even have an annual Pro-AM race that pays a $6000 purse.
I think a lot of it has to do with whether you want to race and compete or if you prefer to have a parade of nostalgia on a TT track. I started racing in 1971, raced through the suspension revolution and continued until 1987 with watercooling and discs. Other than adding some stupidly dangerous double jumps to the tracks

, tracks didn't change a whole lot during that time period. Riders were able to go faster as the bikes improved but mostly due to the ability to take different lines on the better suspended bikes.
The answer to this problem is going to sort itself out in time as riders age and Vintage bikes crumble. Or is it as riders crumble and Vintage bikes age?

Right now, the real issue is that the national sanctioning body still hasn't given its full support to Post Vintage and continues to pit the riders against each other. In time, they will see this as counterproductive to their cause and change, but probably not as long as the current powers that be are in control.
Dave Garner
San Antonio