Brian,Brian J wrote: the old saying goes that "you should try everything at least once except incest and folk dancing".......
Brian J
Always a pleasure to hear your acid wit from time to time!
Campbell
Brian,Brian J wrote: the old saying goes that "you should try everything at least once except incest and folk dancing".......
Brian J
So what are your plans for this year?greyrigg wrote:Never tried folk dancing![]()
XR2's are great for close racing but as Ross says no motorsport is cheap.
''Racing is life, the rest is just waiting'' sums it up for me............
Malcolm
Hi Steve, Thanks for that but your caution is way too subtle for me to get. Why might I need a lawyer??SteveCowen wrote:As you'll notice I'm not a prolific poster here(!), but I did take part in XR challenge from 96-98 - just missed Brian J it seems! Firstly, as everyone else has noted no motor sport is cheap. I bought a car from the English series and ran it myself, and even in those days spent £3-4k per season. And that wasn't being remotely competitive... Once again as has been said before the main costs are race entries (can't believe how much that costs nowadays...), tyres, fuel, general damage (no matter how careful you try to be...), maintenance (you can get away without major rebuilds, but without some fettling you'll be getting left behind as the season progresses), and testing (really need to do this, seemed to be worth ~0.5-1 second in qualifying if I'd got some practice the day before). But as Ally Hunter told me after I'd wrecked my original car and just bought another, if you can't afford to buy it again you cant really afford to go racing. Which I then couldn't. Partly as a result of, err, a "change in personal circumstances", which in turn was partly as a result of XR challenge. You get the drift. If you decide to do it, get yourself a good lawyer...!! That being said, I'd do it again tomorrow...
Careful of this though - I'm sure I read somewhere not that long ago that the regulations of the English series and Scottish series had since diverged and hence the Scottish cars could no longer be run down south. Don't know if that means the English cars are legible for the KH racesSteveCowen wrote:...I bought a car from the English series and ran it myself...
8k does seem reasonable, but when I said a cheap car, I mean cheap...offshorematt wrote:Careful of this though - I'm sure I read somewhere not that long ago that the regulations of the English series and Scottish series had since diverged and hence the Scottish cars could no longer be run down south. Don't know if that means the English cars are legible for the KH racesSteveCowen wrote:...I bought a car from the English series and ran it myself...That said, I guess the cheap car you've been offered is probably local and hence this wouldn't be an issue.
Have you considered Legends? I looked briefly into this a couple of years ago. I'm sure the gist was a novice season would run to about £20k but you were left with a car worth 12k at the end that you could sell on? 8k didn't seem bad for a full season racing although ultimately I lacked the skill and energy to do more than just look
For such an acid wit, you're a helluva dumbo sometimespete wrote:Hi Steve, Thanks for that but your caution is way too subtle for me to get. Why might I need a lawyer??SteveCowen wrote:As you'll notice I'm not a prolific poster here(!), but I did take part in XR challenge from 96-98 - just missed Brian J it seems! Firstly, as everyone else has noted no motor sport is cheap. I bought a car from the English series and ran it myself, and even in those days spent £3-4k per season. And that wasn't being remotely competitive... Once again as has been said before the main costs are race entries (can't believe how much that costs nowadays...), tyres, fuel, general damage (no matter how careful you try to be...), maintenance (you can get away without major rebuilds, but without some fettling you'll be getting left behind as the season progresses), and testing (really need to do this, seemed to be worth ~0.5-1 second in qualifying if I'd got some practice the day before). But as Ally Hunter told me after I'd wrecked my original car and just bought another, if you can't afford to buy it again you cant really afford to go racing. Which I then couldn't. Partly as a result of, err, a "change in personal circumstances", which in turn was partly as a result of XR challenge. You get the drift. If you decide to do it, get yourself a good lawyer...!! That being said, I'd do it again tomorrow...
Pete
Shug wrote:For such an acid wit, you're a helluva dumbo sometimespete wrote:Hi Steve, Thanks for that but your caution is way too subtle for me to get. Why might I need a lawyer??SteveCowen wrote:As you'll notice I'm not a prolific poster here(!), but I did take part in XR challenge from 96-98 - just missed Brian J it seems! Firstly, as everyone else has noted no motor sport is cheap. I bought a car from the English series and ran it myself, and even in those days spent £3-4k per season. And that wasn't being remotely competitive... Once again as has been said before the main costs are race entries (can't believe how much that costs nowadays...), tyres, fuel, general damage (no matter how careful you try to be...), maintenance (you can get away without major rebuilds, but without some fettling you'll be getting left behind as the season progresses), and testing (really need to do this, seemed to be worth ~0.5-1 second in qualifying if I'd got some practice the day before). But as Ally Hunter told me after I'd wrecked my original car and just bought another, if you can't afford to buy it again you cant really afford to go racing. Which I then couldn't. Partly as a result of, err, a "change in personal circumstances", which in turn was partly as a result of XR challenge. You get the drift. If you decide to do it, get yourself a good lawyer...!! That being said, I'd do it again tomorrow...
Pete![]()
Sing along D.I.V.O.R.C.E....
I'm dreadful for overthinking stuff and not actually doing stuff but I chased KH today to get my ARDS paperwork sorted and hoping to go and see the car at the weekend.SteveCowen wrote:Err. exactly as Shug said! But that's all water under the bridge now... As to the eligibility of English cars, OffshoreMatt is right - the regs diverged somewhat as the years went on, and the English scrutineers were never as, well, fastidious, as Willie Grieg. Don't know if he is still the chief scrutineer for the series now though. My last English series car had quite a number of "features" which were probably not strictly legal, including having the roll cage welded through to the front suspension, but I only raced it once before the aforementioned "change in personal circumstances" so it never really got the full Willie Grieg experience...
Just incase my last post was ambiguous though, DO IT!