Ringside Seat: Touristen Fahrten magic
Why don't we have 'tourist drives' here in Blighty?

Here at the Nurburgring the public driving sessions on the 21km Nordschleife are world famous. But did you know that it's not just us residents of the German Eifel mountains who are so fortunate to have such regular and cheap racetrack access?
Hockenheim has its own regular TF slot on a Thursday night, while Oschersleben calls them "Arena Training Sessions". The new Bilsterberg circuit is planning a TF calendar too. The concept all around Germany is always the same; you pay a relatively small amount of money (between €25 and €50 for a 20- to 30-minute session) and drive your own road-legal car on a real race track. The sessions are typically on 'off' days and evenings, when nobody else would use the track. Only on the Nordschleife has TF become a primary money-maker.
But the management here at the 'Ring have recently increased the number of TF sessions available on the 5.2km F1 circuit too. For 40 euros, both cars and motorbikes alike can join one queue in the pitlane and drive the track for just over 20 minutes.
Maybe the sudden increase in public access is a money-making scheme from the management who, after the recent scandal should have been evicted a week ago, but it got me thinking. Why no TF in the UK?
On a public session here in Germany it's very simply stated that road rules apply (StVO). If you crash you're responsible for whatever damages or costs you incur. Germans will even expect these bills to be paid by their insurance company as test cases here have proved that it's not a race and coverage is valid.
Amazingly, there's no briefing at all. No paperwork to be completed. You just pay your money to a guy behind a counter. In return you receive a ticket which gets you into pitlane. The gate between the pitlane and the track is only opened up when the current session's traffic has exited the track at another crash gate. That happens once every twenty minutes. The only marshals on the whole course are stood at the entrance and exit of the track. There is just one emergency response team watching the CCTV coverage.
And you know what? It works. No briefings, no helmets, cars and bikes out together on a real F1 track and it actually works. Sure, the busier sessions can get a little silly. I remember first hearing the term 'Terroristen-fahrt' (Terrorists' driving) at a particularly crazy Hockenheim session in 2005.
But can you imagine this at Brands Hatch? Or Silverstone? Rocking up at 7pm for a sly half-hour thrash on the way home from the office? Hell, the briefing and paperwork alone would take up the first 30 minutes and you'd have to be on your way before the wife/boss figured out what was happening. And that's a shame, because I think TF is the best thing that ever happened to this particular PHer.
Castle Combe do "Action Days" which are a like what I am thinking but they only do a few a year and they end up so busy. I know a guy who was hit by someone else in one of these sessions. The general driving standard does seem lower than your average track day but if they were less busy avoiding the numpties would not be a problem.
Maybe if it was a more frequent, common thing people would calm down a bit, I guess only being able to do that 3 or 4 times per year means the red mist descends a bit quicker than it otherwise would.
Don't get me wrong - I'd love it, but there is no way I'd go out on track with a bunch of people who'd just turned up (or indeed expect people to be happy being on track with me, someone who's never done a trackday). It might not go wrong too often, but when it did, it would be big.
Then we'd see how clever no marshals, one emergency vehicle, no paperwork, no helmet etc would be.
The alternative would be to price it out of range of your average McDonalds Warrior, but then we've got that already - track days.
I'm sorry to sound down, but I just don't think the British general public, in the main, have the sense to do it without ruining..
Gassing Station | General Gassing | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff






k berg. What a PH week for childish German inspired humour!
Just imagine the carnage when the Asda car park brigade are mixing it with Road rage fuelled 1st timers... I shudder at the thought.