• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

car racing question

jer22

Senior member
a buddy of mine is thinking about starting a ispca type racing setup. if he could get the proper permits, what would the acceptable entrance fees be? we're talking parking lot, cone maneuvers, if it was legal, would ya'll be willing to participate in the houston area? all the hopped up cars and trucks in this area might make it work. it would have to be legal, insurance is a must , just wondering what ya'll thought. jer
 
It's fun but you'd better make sure your @ss is covered in case of an accident. Waivers don't hold up well in court, or so I'm told.
 
Originally posted by: boyRacer
i thought most insurance companies wont cover any accident done on a dedicated "race track"...?
I am sure there is track insurance or something along those lines.
 
Originally posted by: boyRacer
i thought most insurance companies wont cover any accident done on a dedicated "race track"...?

Then why do NHRA sanctioned street legal drags even bother asking for your insurance info😕
 
Originally posted by: NutBucket
Originally posted by: boyRacer
i thought most insurance companies wont cover any accident done on a dedicated "race track"...?

Then why do NHRA sanctioned street legal drags even bother asking for your insurance info😕

hmmm i dunno... it would be pretty useless then if your policy doesn't cover it... boy that would suck. 🙁i just remember reading something along those lines... don't remember if it was about motorcycles or cars during track days or whatever.
 
Originally posted by: NutBucket
Originally posted by: boyRacer
i thought most insurance companies wont cover any accident done on a dedicated "race track"...?

Then why do NHRA sanctioned street legal drags even bother asking for your insurance info😕

I believe they do this incase the driver damages any of their property.

Car insurance as far as I understand only covers the car on public roads, and not race tracks.

Insurance would probably be the biggest obstacle in this idea. But I'd just have waiver forms on hand. I think the waiver/liability release form would have to be legal forms written by a lawer or something for them to hold up in court should someone decide to file suit, but you would put a disclaimer in the form about just that anyhow.
 
Originally posted by: TechnoKid
Originally posted by: NutBucket
Originally posted by: boyRacer
i thought most insurance companies wont cover any accident done on a dedicated "race track"...?

Then why do NHRA sanctioned street legal drags even bother asking for your insurance info😕

I believe they do this incase the driver damages any of their property.

Car insurance as far as I understand only covers the car on public roads, and not race tracks.
.

collisions on parking lots and university campuses, Disney World, etc aren't uncommon. What about those?
 
Originally posted by: NeoPTLD
Originally posted by: TechnoKid
Originally posted by: NutBucket
Originally posted by: boyRacer
i thought most insurance companies wont cover any accident done on a dedicated "race track"...?

Then why do NHRA sanctioned street legal drags even bother asking for your insurance info😕

I believe they do this incase the driver damages any of their property.

Car insurance as far as I understand only covers the car on public roads, and not race tracks.
.

collisions on parking lots and university campuses, Disney World, etc aren't uncommon. What about those?

he just said they cover the car on public roads but not race tracks 🙁
 
still didn't answer the question, what would be an acceptable entry fee $25.$50 or more, or less. we used to pay $25 for entry to the drag strip.lmk, jer btw, international sports car association
 
Back
Top