Toyota GR86, 86, FR-S and Subaru BRZ Forum & Owners Community - FT86CLUB

Toyota GR86, 86, FR-S and Subaru BRZ Forum & Owners Community - FT86CLUB (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/index.php)
-   Tracking / Autocross / HPDE / Drifting (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=39)
-   -   Track Day Mishap Contingency Plan? (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=140503)

BigTuna 05-22-2020 03:21 PM

Track Day Mishap Contingency Plan?
 
For those of you who drive your car to and from the track, do you have a contingency plan for if anything were to happen and you can't drive the car home? I'm dying to do a track day, but the anxiety I have for having something happen and not being able to drive the car back, is preventing me from doing so.

AAA is an option, however, the closest track to me is 50 miles out of the free tow range. At $4/mi, it would be $200 to get the car all the way home.

Would there be a cheaper alternate if things went south on track? Have you been in this scenario before?

:thanks:

M0nk3y 05-22-2020 03:29 PM

Where are you at in Ohio?

I went down this route long and hard. Back when I had a BMW 128i my codriver nailed a concrete cinder block that was holding timing equipment at Nationals in Lincoln Nebraska. We damaged a eccentric bolt and caused the LR wheel to toe in 1/2". If we didn't decide to tow out there, I don't know how I'd drive that thing home 14 hours.

After that, went through and decided that a dedicated truck (that doubles as a winter car) and trailer is ultimately the best for my uses and what I wanted going forward.

So, there is no "best" answer. If you're willing to accept and pay $200 out of pocket to get your car home then that's what will have to happen. Also I'd recommend looking into Hagerty or Lockton Motorsport for HPDE Insurance as an extra safety barrier. Sure, added cost but also could help avoid total burden cost if you have a total loss.

Hope to see you out at Mid-Ohio or Pitt Race this year. I'll be at those 2 tracks a lot...

strat61caster 05-22-2020 03:29 PM

Uhaul truck and trailer

Local towing operation may be cheaper than AAA, I'd just pay the AAA fee to not think about it too hard. Pay to play.

ZDan 05-22-2020 03:37 PM

Get AAA plus, 100 mile towing...
Broke driveshaft in LS3 FD at Palmer, had it AAA towed 98 miles to Peabody MA for zero $$$.

DarkSunrise 05-22-2020 03:43 PM

When my friend's car started spewing oil on the track, he called a flatbed to tow it to a local shop. I gave him a ride home.

Triple A plus sounds like a good option as well.

NoHaveMSG 05-22-2020 03:45 PM

I factor potential tow bill as a risk to playing. The primary tracks I go to are 180ish miles away. I try to mitigate the risk by carrying parts that I have seen fail. I usually roll with an extra CV, extra front hub, and extra accessory belt along with some spare fluids.

Code Monkey 05-22-2020 03:59 PM

There are several levels of AAA membership. I think I have a platinum one, which comes with one free 200-mile tow and two free 100-mile tows a year.

BigTuna 05-22-2020 04:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by M0nk3y (Post 3333747)
Where are you at in Ohio?

I went down this route long and hard. Back when I had a BMW 128i my codriver nailed a concrete cinder block that was holding timing equipment at Nationals in Lincoln Nebraska. We damaged a eccentric bolt and caused the LR wheel to toe in 1/2". If we didn't decide to tow out there, I don't know how I'd drive that thing home 14 hours.

After that, went through and decided that a dedicated truck (that doubles as a winter car) and trailer is ultimately the best for my uses and what I wanted going forward.

So, there is no "best" answer. If you're willing to accept and pay $200 out of pocket to get your car home then that's what will have to happen. Also I'd recommend looking into Hagerty or Lockton Motorsport for HPDE Insurance as an extra safety barrier. Sure, added cost but also could help avoid total burden cost if you have a total loss.

Hope to see you out at Mid-Ohio or Pitt Race this year. I'll be at those 2 tracks a lot...

I'm in Cincinnati.
Putnam Park - 149 mi
Mid-Ohio - 167mi
NCM - 210mi

I've looked into Hagerty, for track day insurance, and would definitely get it anyway, but they don't have any details about adding the towing supplement on. I wonder if adding that to the insurance package would be an option.

Quote:

Originally Posted by strat61caster (Post 3333748)
Uhaul truck and trailer

Local towing operation may be cheaper than AAA, I'd just pay the AAA fee to not think about it too hard. Pay to play.

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZDan (Post 3333749)
Get AAA plus, 100 mile towing...
Broke driveshaft in LS3 FD at Palmer, had it AAA towed 98 miles to Peabody MA for zero $$$.

Quote:

Originally Posted by DarkSunrise (Post 3333752)
When my friend's car started spewing oil on the track, he called a flatbed to tow it to a local shop. I gave him a ride home.

Triple A plus sounds like a good option as well.

Quote:

Originally Posted by NoHaveMSG (Post 3333753)
I factor potential tow bill as a risk to playing. The primary tracks I go to are 180ish miles away. I try to mitigate the risk by carrying parts that I have seen fail. I usually roll with an extra CV, extra front hub, and extra accessory belt along with some spare fluids.

Thanks for all the responses!

AAA is definitely the best bet for me personally, and $200 really isn't too bad of a price. I like the idea of pre-budgeting for it.

Please continue to throw out ideas though in case someone in the future has the same questions with different circumstances.

EndlessAzure 05-22-2020 04:17 PM

I always get Track Insurance. Towing is included. Pays for damages to the car, too.

I go through Hagerty these days. The policy includes (at least for me and events I've been to): $1k for Towing, $500 for rental car, $10k for clean-up. I didn't have to add it on or pay more for that.

skylinekin 05-22-2020 04:20 PM

If you do a thorough prep on the car beforehand and drive within your limits the likely hood of not being able to drive home from an HPDE is very small....BUT there is always that risk. I did it for many years without issue. Now that I have a wife and kid we use the truck and trailer but I do miss the simplicity of just throwing a few things in the car and heading to the track.

Just do it, you wont regret it...much more fun than autocross if that is all you have experienced so far.

ls1ac 05-22-2020 04:30 PM

We had a group of friends that went to the track for the same day of fun. Two of us had trailers. All these cars had plates so they could be driven home. we figured that the chance of more than two not drivable was slim so if one got bent then there was a trailer there.
I have taken home other cars several times. Each time the car owner has offered to pay my fuel for the truck, and they got to drive my car home following me.




Track cars are an other story. All of us have trailers, an enclosed with tools and spare parts. Also good if it rains or you want to spend the night cheep. and an open roll back that is easy to load whether or not the car is running or broken (never my fault, right). This is a long and slippery down hill road you are traveling.


find out who else is going, and if they have a trailer.

steverife 05-26-2020 08:47 AM

I towed for a couple of years for autocross, but I've driven to events the last several years.

I have several friends that tow, so if something does happen, I hope that I can get help that way. If I can't and have to pay for a tow, that still comes out cheaper than buying a truck and trailer.

Not to mention, in the couple years I was towing, I had a radiator failure once and had an ECU brick on me another time. So that is something to think about as well.

Summerwolf 05-26-2020 09:58 AM

Car trailer and my truck.

Depends on how far the track is. I'd consider the risk and location and if it's close enough and like an autox or HPDE I would just drive it and risk it. Worse comes to worse have someone grab the truck and come get me. If it's a bit away I'd trailer it to begin with.

TommyW 05-26-2020 10:53 AM

The best insurance is to stay on top of your maintenance and prep and drive the car on the track with the mindset that you need to drive it home. You may leave a couple of seconds on the table however you lower the risk by a huge amount. Doing HPDE is all about fun and learning to be a better driver and not an exercise in beating the sh#t out of your car.

There’s this stigma that once you enter a track that the car automatically becomes unreliable. The AAA program is a good backup though. Running with a good track day organization will get you a safe environment so just get out there and enjoy yourself.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:48 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
User Alert System provided by Advanced User Tagging v3.3.0 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.


Garage vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.