You don't need to be rich to race in the UK, Motorsport isn't free but you can compete cheaply.RacingEngineering wrote:Good day. I would like to get informed about the amateur racing culture, especially in United Kingdom. As far as i know, if you love racing you should buy a car for 1000£-2000£, modify it and race on trackdays. I think it is expensive and i search for solutions to enable non-rich people to race on weekends with their friends. Please provide some information about the amateur racing culture. Thank you.
Facts Only wrote:You don't need to be rich to race in the UK, Motorsport isn't free but you can compete cheaply.RacingEngineering wrote:Good day. I would like to get informed about the amateur racing culture, especially in United Kingdom. As far as i know, if you love racing you should buy a car for 1000£-2000£, modify it and race on trackdays. I think it is expensive and i search for solutions to enable non-rich people to race on weekends with their friends. Please provide some information about the amateur racing culture. Thank you.
Firstly you cant 'Race' on trackdays they are non-timed non-competitive fun events. Also they are actually more expensive than racing as you burn far more fuel, tyres and brake pads running all day and they cost ~£150-300 to attend whereas many MSA event entry fees are less than this.
The cheapest forms of motorsport are generally competitive timed events such as Sprints, Time Attack, Single Event Rallying or Autosolo. For these you could easily prepare a car for <£1000 get all the safety gear for <£300 get your licence and memberships for ~£75 and entry events for ~£125 so £1500 would get you into Amateur motorsport.
Racing is generally more costly as the cars need more safety gear (roll cages etc) and the competitor needs higher lever safety equipment and licence and you use more fuel, tyres and brakes. Also entry fees start at ~£200. There are plenty of clubs like the 750mc running excellent low cost race series.
Have a look at the latest MSA magazine for a number of articles on Autosolo, Off Road trials and and other incredibly cheap motorsport.
No. I want to own all cars and give them as a rent. In champcar you have to have a crew with mechanics, with your own car. It is not good. Cars will be provided by me and they will be absolutely same. I just want to realize if it will attract people or notstrad wrote:ChumpCar .. You'd be surprised how much fun they have.
https://www.chumpcar.com/
I think Go Motorsport have already beaten you to it (in the UK at least)RacingEngineering wrote:Facts Only wrote:You don't need to be rich to race in the UK, Motorsport isn't free but you can compete cheaply.RacingEngineering wrote:Good day. I would like to get informed about the amateur racing culture, especially in United Kingdom. As far as i know, if you love racing you should buy a car for 1000£-2000£, modify it and race on trackdays. I think it is expensive and i search for solutions to enable non-rich people to race on weekends with their friends. Please provide some information about the amateur racing culture. Thank you.
Firstly you cant 'Race' on trackdays they are non-timed non-competitive fun events. Also they are actually more expensive than racing as you burn far more fuel, tyres and brake pads running all day and they cost ~£150-300 to attend whereas many MSA event entry fees are less than this.
The cheapest forms of motorsport are generally competitive timed events such as Sprints, Time Attack, Single Event Rallying or Autosolo. For these you could easily prepare a car for <£1000 get all the safety gear for <£300 get your licence and memberships for ~£75 and entry events for ~£125 so £1500 would get you into Amateur motorsport.
Racing is generally more costly as the cars need more safety gear (roll cages etc) and the competitor needs higher lever safety equipment and licence and you use more fuel, tyres and brakes. Also entry fees start at ~£200. There are plenty of clubs like the 750mc running excellent low cost race series.
Have a look at the latest MSA magazine for a number of articles on Autosolo, Off Road trials and and other incredibly cheap motorsport.
Thanks for your broad answer. But my purpose is not just racing(as a hobby) but to find solution to make it easier for all people to race (as an entrepreneur). And i am making a research if it will be sustainable to start a business on this idea.....Example. You come to the nearest race track with your friends or alone, race all day on a car with good downforce and grip, have fun,throw out your men needs as competition feeling and speed, etc.... I am sure people will like it if there was a nice platform. My aim is to expand amateur racing but my budget is limited and i search for solutions
Facts Only, you do not understand my concept again. It is not good when organizations require you to have a team and a car. It should be provided. And by my logic, if cars will be provided by an organization, it will attract much more people. Go Motorsport is also not a competitor for me, cause they require a carFacts Only wrote:I think Go Motorsport have already beaten you to it (in the UK at least)RacingEngineering wrote:Facts Only wrote:
You don't need to be rich to race in the UK, Motorsport isn't free but you can compete cheaply.
Firstly you cant 'Race' on trackdays they are non-timed non-competitive fun events. Also they are actually more expensive than racing as you burn far more fuel, tyres and brake pads running all day and they cost ~£150-300 to attend whereas many MSA event entry fees are less than this.
The cheapest forms of motorsport are generally competitive timed events such as Sprints, Time Attack, Single Event Rallying or Autosolo. For these you could easily prepare a car for <£1000 get all the safety gear for <£300 get your licence and memberships for ~£75 and entry events for ~£125 so £1500 would get you into Amateur motorsport.
Racing is generally more costly as the cars need more safety gear (roll cages etc) and the competitor needs higher lever safety equipment and licence and you use more fuel, tyres and brakes. Also entry fees start at ~£200. There are plenty of clubs like the 750mc running excellent low cost race series.
Have a look at the latest MSA magazine for a number of articles on Autosolo, Off Road trials and and other incredibly cheap motorsport.
Thanks for your broad answer. But my purpose is not just racing(as a hobby) but to find solution to make it easier for all people to race (as an entrepreneur). And i am making a research if it will be sustainable to start a business on this idea.....Example. You come to the nearest race track with your friends or alone, race all day on a car with good downforce and grip, have fun,throw out your men needs as competition feeling and speed, etc.... I am sure people will like it if there was a nice platform. My aim is to expand amateur racing but my budget is limited and i search for solutions
Richard, i ticked a 0-150 GBP range on website and there is absolutely no option. This is what i want to change. I study Master of Entrepreneurship in UK and i am aware of all costs. I dont like the structure here and want to change approach to amateur racing AT ALL. I want to establish a culture where in all local tracks will be suitable cars(identical cars) where you can come anytime and race just for 20-40 GBP all day(it is not difficult to find a low-cost strategy). I am sure that 90% people who love racing refuse this conditions that we have now and only 10% agree with it. I want to change itRichard wrote:You need to be looking at trackday packages like this http://www.trackdays.co.uk/driving-experience/
Your cost will be financing and maintaining a fleet of cars, plus hiring tracks and transporting your fleet to those tracks. Your competitors have cars that stay at the tracks so they won't have those transportation costs. You'll also need to consider the add-on costs for insurance, PR, administration, refreshments, etc.
To be honest there are lot of companies offering this which means it's a competitive market. You'll need to do something quite different if you want to beak into the market.