I would have to agree with all I've read here so far except that noise may actually NOT be a tougher problem to conquer with 2-strokes (if you know what you are doing).
All it takes is sound engineering (pun intended). I worked as a noise cancellation engineer many years ago.
Since a 2-stroke must run at a fairly constant RPM (hence limited range of noise frequencies) with the associated CVT, it makes designing/tuning a sound cancellation system easier.
Modern 2-strokes in sleds are extremely quiet and some racing sanctioning bodies that have modified 2-stroke classes run more strict noise limits than any SCCA event.
In either 2 or 4 stoke cases, it generally takes big mufflers to get the noise down w/out losing HP.
Keeping the pipes out of the breeze helps a lot since the pipe/expansion chamber sheet metal sides are nice loudspeakers. They must be wrapped if they stand out. Same for inlet tract.
Perhaps the quietest and greatest power for the least weight would be a turbocharged 2-stroke running at constant RPM with a CVT.
A turbo 4 stoke with 4 or 5 valves per cyl might be quieter still with a CVT-but one would have to work at the weight a little more.
Last, big HP with the Japanese cars in drag racing is somtimes still only made by carbs on some motors. Carbs can do atomizing that injection still cannot match on some inlet tracts. Fexibility probably always will still belong to injection.
I've always wondered way no one has asked for more wing for heavier cars in AM.
Could make the class more fun for more different kinds of cars-perhps less expensive ones to build, too.
The argument that wing area should be restricted to limit the overturning moment is not valid if the vehicle weight down below in the chasis is increased also. Maybe extra wing area could also be tied to a rule to drop the max wing height at the same time to be doubly sure of no ncreaded danger..
Ahhhh, who am I kidding? Somebody would gripe and kill the whole idea.
AM is not a growth oriented class especially so now that it doesn't have any min participation numbers as the 2nd fastest SCCA solo class (next to F125) :->