I know from the start I'm not going to end up going the same route as damon hill, I simply dont have the money, but I am hoping to have a new and rather well paid job pretty soon to at least maybe open up options in series like Formula Ford or Formula Renault, both of which I was reading, you can buy and run a private car in for a "reasonable" price.
So what does the racing school actually involve? Was it an every day, full on dedication thing, or was it simmilar to your driving licence, couple of hours a week and test when your ready?
Craig at the end of the day MONEY TALKS!
I've done XR2i racing, Formula Ford and rallying. If you ain't got the dough (and a blindin' team of tweakers behind you) you'll never be nowt in racing.
In my beloved old TR8 I could whip Sierra Cosworths, alas a friend hit a tree at nearly 120mph and that was the end of that
Racing takes some serious dough! Best bet is to do some courses and join a motorclub. That'll help you get into things without giving the bank manager a hairy baby
So what does the racing school actually involve? Was it an every day, full on dedication thing, or was it simmilar to your driving licence, couple of hours a week and test when your ready?
Did you use track cars supplied by the track and school? Or were they standard road cars with some modifications for the track?
cheers mate:)
The big cost I have read about seems to be the racing gear when starting out.
This is partly why I'm so interested in being at the autoshow both days, I want to try and gather as much information and as many prices as possible.
cheers mate:)
The big cost I have read about seems to be the racing gear when starting out.
This is partly why I'm so interested in being at the autoshow both days, I want to try and gather as much information and as many prices as possible.
I'd imagine race suits, fireproofs, helmets and boots aren't cheap these days. I never got that far. :P
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