Are trackdays for me?
Are trackdays for me?
Author
Discussion

cheezburger

Original Poster:

27 posts

210 months

Thursday 23rd October 2008
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Hello everyone, I've never done any sort of track day before and I was curious to see if it was for me.

My friend and I have been driving for a couple of years, we both own classic cars that are painfully slow and because of this we feel that we would like to get behind the wheel of something fast and to let loose once in a while. We can both afford to initially buy a fast car but we can not afford the commitment to keep it on the road, mainly because of astronomical insurance due to our age.

So I was thinking of buying a car, turning it in to a track car and then towing it to track days using my land rover and trailer. Would the car be allowed on a track day with no MOT, Tax or Insurance?

Is this a good idea or are there other events that would be better suited?

boxsey

3,579 posts

234 months

Thursday 23rd October 2008
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Plenty of people take along track cars that don't have tax, insurance or an MOT. However not having an MOT does not mean the car does not have to be roadworthy. Breaking down on track is not something you want to do especially if it leads to oil or coolant being dumped on the track. You would not be popular if the latter happened. And of course, you want the car to be in good condition for your own and passengers safety.

I believe a TDO could stop you going on track if they think your car is not fit for purpose. Apart from that, go do it and have fun!

Don

28,378 posts

308 months

Thursday 23rd October 2008
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To be honest?

If you want to dip your toes in the water and find out if it is for you? HIRE a track car. Jonny at Bookatrack will see you right in a brilliant Caterham for a day. Well worth it.

If you then decide you want to do so many track days that you are happy to buy a track car, suffer its depreciation and running costs and tow it to circuits with your Landy you'll be doing so knowing how much fun it is and therefore why it's worth splashing out the money.

In your situation I would buy a Caterham and a trailer anyway. They are mechanically straightforward to look after, ALREADY a perfect track car, inexpensive to buy, slow to depreciate and don't wear out discs, pads and tyres as quickly because they are properly light.

If you want a TRACK car you have to be justifying why you aren't buying a Caterham IMO.

cheezburger

Original Poster:

27 posts

210 months

Thursday 23rd October 2008
quotequote all
Thank you for the answers guys, the car would be in fantastic condition, it just not have t&t. Had a look at the Bookatrack website, looks great I'll ring up and book a day to get the feel. I was thinking of getting an m535i, they're fantastic cars so much fun but that might change after a day in a caterham.

jleroux

1,511 posts

284 months

Thursday 23rd October 2008
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i'm in the office all day cheezburger (0870 7441635) if you want to chat about the caterham hire option.

you could rent a caterham for the day for what it's going to cost to run an M535!

cheers,

Jonny
BaT

norasport

66 posts

233 months

Thursday 23rd October 2008
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Of course you need a caterham, don't you want to enjoy the corners?
From a Caterham and M3 owner!

Lost my mojo

205 posts

249 months

Friday 24th October 2008
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Caterhams are amazing but dont discount other 7esque cars. For a lot less money you could look at Raw Striker, MK Indy, Westfield etc etc

Not trying to turn this into a what 7 is better than others but I wouldn't call a Caterham cheap compared to what else is on offer.

By looking at other 7 cars also opens up all sorts of engine options also throwing into the mix bike engine cars.... Not saying they are better or worse - just different.

When hiring the caterham it would be a good idea to get as many passenger laps as possible in different cars to see what you fancy.


poshgit

169 posts

244 months

Friday 24th October 2008
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weight, weight, weight.....it all come down to this in the end for speed and running costs!
lighter weight car means less wear on parts (discs, shocks pads etc)...also faster - no matter how much grunt you have up front.
millions of posts on "what track car should i get" - do a seach
my t'pennworth
e30 325 - stripped out - caged - cheap parts - lots of fun....but then i'm biased - let battle commence - i'm sure the mazda, lotus, scooby boys and all with fight their corner.....!

scottbm

105 posts

211 months

Friday 24th October 2008
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i`m with poshgit. Go the beemer route. Just done the same in august but mines a E36 328. So much fun. Just take the plunge, you won`t look back.

I PROMISE

charnock

187 posts

220 months

Monday 27th October 2008
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caterham seems like a fun idea for hire, but then id really like an e30 325 or an e34 535. even if the big five isnt the most logical aproach. allso quite fancy a Saab 900 T16 aero. even though its fwd and the gearbox wont take more than 250bhp or so there still fairly light. but for starters lets just book a go in a caterham.

the current car situation. both rwd and fun but not at all track day material and would require too much effort to make either capable of it.

TIPPER

2,955 posts

243 months

Tuesday 28th October 2008
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Bimmer 5 series - I wouldn't. It'll probably cost a fortune in tyres and brakes alone, let alone fuel etc.
As other have said get a light car, generally cheaper to run in terms of brakes, tyres and other consumables and much more fun than punting a barge around. You need to factor not just the purchase price of the car (that's the relatively easy bit) but how much its going to cost in terms of TD running costs. Don't forget to budget for getting to a from circuits and bear in mind that most TDs have early briefings so a hotel or B&B can be a good idea so you've had a good night's sleep (track days can be tiring).
I live in Plymouth so most tracks are a fair trip (5-600 or more mile round trips) for me so I always stay in a hotel (you can get a room in a Travelodge for £19.00 with a bit of forward planning). I found my perfect track day toy in a series 1 Elise: 35-40mpg on the way to the track, music to listen to, space for my luggage........and a whole lot of fun on track. Just be wary of the real bargain basement jobs though - they often need a lot of not obvious work.
If a bimmer still appeals have a look in the Seloc classifieds. You'll find a few race-prepped E30s from about £4-5k ready to go.
What ever you get, just make sure its not going to fall apart on track and have fun.

juansolo

3,012 posts

302 months

Wednesday 29th October 2008
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If it's purpose is to be a track car and nothing else then you'd be mad to consider anything as heavy as a 5 series. It'll annihilate the brakes (at the bigger tracks with big braking points probably within a few laps), eat tyres and in comparison to an equivalent caterfield, be lardy, wallowy and slow. It seems pointless to buy a large luxury road car as a track car... That goes for most normal road cars this side of a Porsche GT3.

Caterfields on the other hand are cheap to run, cheap to repair, and just about the most fun you can possibly have on a race track. If you're not running it on the road, all the downsides to Caterfield ownership are irrelevant. Hire one and see, you'll not look back.

Edited by juansolo on Wednesday 29th October 13:49

avalaugh

20 posts

226 months

Wednesday 29th October 2008
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I use a peugeot 306 gti-6

They are so cheap now, £700 ish for one with a couple of dents, totally strip it out, and upgrade the suspension.

The 6 speed box is a gem on track, parts are 10 a penny, and returns good mpg even on track all things considered.

The engines are good for 200k as long as oil changes are done regulary !

Batfink

1,032 posts

282 months

Wednesday 29th October 2008
quotequote all
avalaugh said:
I use a peugeot 306 gti-6

They are so cheap now, £700 ish for one with a couple of dents, totally strip it out, and upgrade the suspension.

The 6 speed box is a gem on track, parts are 10 a penny, and returns good mpg even on track all things considered.

The engines are good for 200k as long as oil changes are done regulary !
an cambelts are changed very regularly

charnock

187 posts

220 months

Wednesday 29th October 2008
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I do agree with the comments on the 5-series, it would be daft but i still have the mental image of that 1000bhp e34 one going around gatebill. Still would prefer RWD but dont hold some kind of hatred for anything FWD like some seem to. What about MK3 astra's? not paticularly the GSI with the c20xe but the ecotec one must be fairly quick and there very cheap to buy. but then theres the underdamped marshmallow handling.

cheezburger

Original Poster:

27 posts

210 months

Wednesday 29th October 2008
quotequote all
charnock said:
I do agree with the comments on the 5-series, it would be daft but i still have the mental image of that 1000bhp e34 one going around gatebill. Still would prefer RWD but dont hold some kind of hatred for anything FWD like some seem to. What about MK3 astra's? not paticularly the GSI with the c20xe but the ecotec one must be fairly quick and there very cheap to buy. but then theres the underdamped marshmallow handling.
Because they'll be a rubbish track car, I don't think the m535i is as heavy as everybody thinks 1200kg in standard guise but yeah there's better out there.

ian964

534 posts

276 months

Thursday 30th October 2008
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cheezburger said:
charnock said:
I do agree with the comments on the 5-series, it would be daft but i still have the mental image of that 1000bhp e34 one going around gatebill. Still would prefer RWD but dont hold some kind of hatred for anything FWD like some seem to. What about MK3 astra's? not paticularly the GSI with the c20xe but the ecotec one must be fairly quick and there very cheap to buy. but then theres the underdamped marshmallow handling.
Because they'll be a rubbish track car, I don't think the m535i is as heavy as everybody thinks 1200kg in standard guise but yeah there's better out there.
think you're a bit optimistic with that 1200kg - the 1980 E12 M535i was about 1390kg, and they just got heavier from there, over 1500kg for the E28 and so on.

charnock

187 posts

220 months

Thursday 30th October 2008
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think that was the unladen weight of cheezeburgger's 525 e28

juansolo

3,012 posts

302 months

Friday 31st October 2008
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Or about an S1 Elise heavier than a Caterfield...

madmatt1985

1,116 posts

231 months

Friday 31st October 2008
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have a look at clio cup 172's and 182's. you can buy the cheap and as they are moden cars you sthe running cost would be cheaper than BMW's and so on. im looking at 7 type cars my self but i plan to use it on the road as well. there are 100 of kit car out there and diffrent engines. it just a matter of what money you have. if you have never done a track day i would recomend you hire a car first, you can pay the pro's to spend 30min with you showing the track and lines.

OR

have you thought about Go-karting. for 2K you can have a good fast 125cc 2 stroke kart. that will do 0-60 faster than most cars and you under a inch from the floor. iv been racing karts for a just over a year or two. and its cheap fast and safe. will cost you £100 a day all in, value for money it the cheapest motor sport for your money. if you a essex persons and are half interested you caould take a test drive in mine lOL.