Toyman01 said:
We just finished a Lemons race.
The cage was the cost of tubing. Jensenman and I built it 6 years ago. It was about $150 in tubing back then, figure $200+- now. Amortized over the life of the car, it's pretty cheap. I did have to add another passenger door bar for this race, $0, as I already had the tubing. The cage is a one time expense unless you smash up the car. This is event #6 for the Civic.
Don't cheap out on brake pads. Race pads are $250, we get 2, 14 hour events out of them. Oil and such are negligible. We did have to replace a head gasket Saturday, $20. We will have to add a fire suppression unit for next year, $300. Tires are $90 each. We had to buy 6 for this race due to age, but the next race will only need two new tires.
Suits and such can range from ridiculous to reasonable. One team member bought a used suit for $100, $90 shoes and socks, used her autocross helmet and borrowed a Hans. Another team member spent well over $2k for personal safety gear. Harnesses are the same, Gforce, $70, Schroth, $400+. Shop smart and prices are reasonable. Buy the pretty stuff or the latest and greatest, expect to pay dearly. For the most part, personal gear is a one time cost.
Entry fees for the weekend were around $1300 split 4 ways. Gas for the car was about $200, and everyone slept at the track. Food for the entire crew was about $300 and that was me feeding about 15 people, 3 meals a day for 3 days.
You can do racing on the cheap, and every event gets cheaper until you smash up a car. The gear, cage and such don't have to be bought every race. Every Lemons race car we have built was paid for by the entire team and split 4-6 ways. That makes things cheaper per person. Just build it with people you like.
When I first went vintage racing back in 1975 I taped up the headlights. Borrowed a suit helmet and fire extinguisher And already had a 3 inch lap belt.
Paid my $10 entry fee and put the numbers on the car with shoe polish.
We were the noon event for The Trans-Am
I think my first SCCA drivers school in 1969 cost $45 and 104 octane gas was 32 cents a gallon
Easier times back then!
It looks like local club events will be the cheapest way to go racing. Even cheaper than SCCA regional events. But I might get my license with SCCA if they will renew it after a drivers school refresher
consumables like oil is real expensive since I use 14 quarts of it in the Jaguar and that is one area I don’t cheap out with.
Brake pads on the other hand last at least a season even with racing at Elkhart Lake. 4 mike long track. Three high speed straights followed by tight 90 degree corners total of 14 corners per lap. ( and the best passing is under braking)
Fuel would be insanely expensive except I’ll use E85 so instead of a couple of drums of the $14.00 a gallon stuff I’ll bring a couple of drums of $1.75 a gallon stuff