Book a Track - Caterham hire
Discussion
I'm sure it's a great way to get into trackdays Rich. All I would add, from my point of view anyway, would be do one or two days and see how addicted you're getting. Probably very!!
In which case I'd weigh up, at that point, whether to buy your own car or not. I can see the attraction of arriving in your everyday car and thrashing someone elses car around all day but, if you do 10 days at £650 per day, that's £6500. Even if you deduct £200 per day entry fees, £2000, then £100 fuel/tyres (more if you crash or blow-up, fair enough), £1000, you've still spent £3500 extra. You could get an OK track car for that. OK, you've got to get it to the track and you will have breakages but, you'll learn the car, as you'll be in YOUR car every trackday and you'll always get something back for it if you sell-up, unless you totally and utterly smash it to smithereens!
I just think if I spent £6500 on trackdays, like some on here and had no car to show for it, I'd give myself a good talking to!
All IMHO of course. There's something for everyone. Either way you'll love it! Have fun!
In which case I'd weigh up, at that point, whether to buy your own car or not. I can see the attraction of arriving in your everyday car and thrashing someone elses car around all day but, if you do 10 days at £650 per day, that's £6500. Even if you deduct £200 per day entry fees, £2000, then £100 fuel/tyres (more if you crash or blow-up, fair enough), £1000, you've still spent £3500 extra. You could get an OK track car for that. OK, you've got to get it to the track and you will have breakages but, you'll learn the car, as you'll be in YOUR car every trackday and you'll always get something back for it if you sell-up, unless you totally and utterly smash it to smithereens!

I just think if I spent £6500 on trackdays, like some on here and had no car to show for it, I'd give myself a good talking to!
All IMHO of course. There's something for everyone. Either way you'll love it! Have fun!

marky911 said:
I'm sure it's a great way to get into trackdays Rich. All I would add, from my point of view anyway, would be do one or two days and see how addicted you're getting. Probably very!!
In which case I'd weigh up, at that point, whether to buy your own car or not. I can see the attraction of arriving in your everyday car and thrashing someone elses car around all day but, if you do 10 days at £650 per day, that's £6500. Even if you deduct £200 per day entry fees, £2000, then £100 fuel/tyres (more if you crash or blow-up, fair enough), £1000, you've still spent £3500 extra. You could get an OK track car for that. OK, you've got to get it to the track and you will have breakages but, you'll learn the car, as you'll be in YOUR car every trackday and you'll always get something back for it if you sell-up, unless you totally and utterly smash it to smithereens!
I just think if I spent £6500 on trackdays, like some on here and had no car to show for it, I'd give myself a good talking to!
All IMHO of course. There's something for everyone. Either way you'll love it! Have fun!
Marky911 - You're spot on thats my intention to give it a try and see if I enjoy it - I keep thinking about buying a weekend toy/road legal track car and I keep coming up with a "Caterham" type car - cheap to run and somethings that offers road-legal fun as well, that's why I'm keen to give BookaTrack a go to see if I like the whole experience. In which case I'd weigh up, at that point, whether to buy your own car or not. I can see the attraction of arriving in your everyday car and thrashing someone elses car around all day but, if you do 10 days at £650 per day, that's £6500. Even if you deduct £200 per day entry fees, £2000, then £100 fuel/tyres (more if you crash or blow-up, fair enough), £1000, you've still spent £3500 extra. You could get an OK track car for that. OK, you've got to get it to the track and you will have breakages but, you'll learn the car, as you'll be in YOUR car every trackday and you'll always get something back for it if you sell-up, unless you totally and utterly smash it to smithereens!

I just think if I spent £6500 on trackdays, like some on here and had no car to show for it, I'd give myself a good talking to!
All IMHO of course. There's something for everyone. Either way you'll love it! Have fun!

My husband has developed an addiction to caterham track days with BAT and has done a fair few days. I recently went along with him, and unfortunately have also developed the same addiction - I bought him a track day for Christmas and added myself as the extra driver!
It's great fun and I can highly recommend it, although I did get very wet so am hoping our day in March will be a dry one.
It's great fun and I can highly recommend it, although I did get very wet so am hoping our day in March will be a dry one.
marky911 said:
I'm sure it's a great way to get into trackdays Rich. All I would add, from my point of view anyway, would be do one or two days and see how addicted you're getting. Probably very!!
In which case I'd weigh up, at that point, whether to buy your own car or not. I can see the attraction of arriving in your everyday car and thrashing someone elses car around all day but, if you do 10 days at £650 per day, that's £6500. Even if you deduct £200 per day entry fees, £2000, then £100 fuel/tyres (more if you crash or blow-up, fair enough), £1000, you've still spent £3500 extra. You could get an OK track car for that. OK, you've got to get it to the track and you will have breakages but, you'll learn the car, as you'll be in YOUR car every trackday and you'll always get something back for it if you sell-up, unless you totally and utterly smash it to smithereens!
I just think if I spent £6500 on trackdays, like some on here and had no car to show for it, I'd give myself a good talking to!
All IMHO of course. There's something for everyone. Either way you'll love it! Have fun!
An OK track car but you'll still need a trailer, maintenance and somewhere to keep it. If you're looking at a new Caterham you could probably budget £2500 per year in depreciation, at least for the first three years.In which case I'd weigh up, at that point, whether to buy your own car or not. I can see the attraction of arriving in your everyday car and thrashing someone elses car around all day but, if you do 10 days at £650 per day, that's £6500. Even if you deduct £200 per day entry fees, £2000, then £100 fuel/tyres (more if you crash or blow-up, fair enough), £1000, you've still spent £3500 extra. You could get an OK track car for that. OK, you've got to get it to the track and you will have breakages but, you'll learn the car, as you'll be in YOUR car every trackday and you'll always get something back for it if you sell-up, unless you totally and utterly smash it to smithereens!

I just think if I spent £6500 on trackdays, like some on here and had no car to show for it, I'd give myself a good talking to!
All IMHO of course. There's something for everyone. Either way you'll love it! Have fun!

It's rather expensive but I can see why a lot of people pick that option.
Hi
We can provide you with an Ariel Atom from £600 on track, plus you track day fee, something different to a Caterham if you fancy.
Thanks
James
www.AtomHire.co.uk
We can provide you with an Ariel Atom from £600 on track, plus you track day fee, something different to a Caterham if you fancy.
Thanks
James
www.AtomHire.co.uk
CDP said:
An OK track car but you'll still need a trailer, maintenance and somewhere to keep it. If you're looking at a new Caterham you could probably budget £2500 per year in depreciation, at least for the first three years.
It's rather expensive but I can see why a lot of people pick that option.
Yep, good points but, you could go road legal with a Caterham (although I wouldn't, incase I crashed on track) so wouldn't have to have a trailer instantly and you certainly don't need something brand new. Infact I couldn't think of anything worse than paying top money for something that's inevitably going to be thrashed to death, stone-chipped and generally given a very hard life.It's rather expensive but I can see why a lot of people pick that option.
I do appreciate though that you wouldn't get a good Caterham for the £3500 I mentioned (I was refering to a starter car such as a well prepped hot hatch or similar) but, you could get a good Caterham type car for £6k-£7k and probably look at recouping at least half of that a few years later.
Like I say it's just opinion and one or two days "hired-car days" would be a great introduction. More than that though and I'd definately rather have my own car that I can learn how to drive and maintain. It's a steep learning curve though that doesn't suit everyone.

Edited by marky911 on Tuesday 4th January 16:01
marky911 said:
but, you could get a good Caterham type car for £6k-£7k and probably look at recouping at least half of that a few years later.
For a very good trackable Caterfield look towards £9k (and expect a long search to snag a properly good one). Otherwise expect to be spending some time and money on it after purchase. £13k is about were the old Caterham track cars start.Gassing Station | Track Days | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff



