So, I've been running autocross and time trials for a few years now (I don't have anywhere to park a trailer, which has kept me away from the wheel-to-wheel money pit). During that time, I've had a ton of fun and met quite a few great people! I've also had quite a bit of pain (particularly my lower back & hip), frustration/stress and thrown away more money than I care to think about. I do wonder to myself: how in the world do people afford this hobby? I'm pretty sure a crack cocaine habit might be cheaper.
I sometimes come to the point where I wonder: is the occasional fun automotive outing worth the hardship that it costs? Do any of you ever come to the same conclusion?
I started in autocross with the SCCA, like I assume most of you did. There's a lot to like about the SCCA, particularly in the Street classes: mods are kept to a minimum, which helps the cost not get out of hand. Or so it might seem. It's all fun and games until you start getting competitive... then you find yourself somehow justifying $800+ on a single splined sway bar, or $3000-$4000+ on a set of shocks in your "Street" car because the class allows it and you're trying to gain every advantage possible... to say nothing of the cost of tires, or that lightweight set of OEM sized wheels to save 2-3 lbs per corner. But still, the money spent on mods can be cheap compared to other forms of racing...
But the cost of cars isn't. Unfortunately, while the SCCA tries hard to keep costs down in several areas, because of the structure of the classes, there's always a "car to have". You might have the right car for the class right now, but next year, when that shiny new speed machine comes out, or they do a class restructure, all that hard work you put into the car might not do you any good. All of the sudden, you're trading in your beloved car of X number of years and eating a large bill for new taxes/registration and depreciation. Long term, even the "cheap" classes aren't cheap.
So, you turn to organizations like NASA or Gridlife. From all I can tell, NASA's ruleset is likely the most fair rulesets I can think of, with a real effort to not create a "car to have" (even if it does happen from time to time). Last year at NASA Nationals, an old FWD Saturn SC2 took 2nd place in TT6 lol- talk about being able to make almost anything competitive. The idea behind it is great. In the lower classes, plenty of older, relatively cheap cars can be made competitive... but the cost to build said machines are astronomical for most ordinary folk. I can't even begin to think about how much such a machine would cost if you were having to pay for labor... and it gets a whole lot worse if the local fast guys literally own their own speed shops and are out racing to make a name for themselves, with an entire team to wrench at their facility and a budget that would make a privateer cry at night... how do you really compete with that while working a full time job/career and taking care of a family?
Speaking of labor, how many of you have sustained long-term injuries from overuse in the garage? For all the work in the garage, these days I get to spend plenty of time with my physical therapist, Tommy. The more interesting days are when he's trying to use cupping therapy to get blood to certain injured areas and I come home with my back looking like I spent my afternoon in a make-out session with an octopus...
And no matter how many jobs I do on how many cars, no matter how much my tool collection grows and my knowledge level increases, it feels inevitable that things will go wrong on a regular basis. My planned 1 day in the garage will turn into the next 1-2 weeks of troubleshooting whatever issue came up as a result of said project that weekend, and my XY budget quickly turns into an XYZ budget trying to fix whatever was broken during said project... I'll be up late, watching Youtube videos about whatever issue I'm trying to diagnose that week, unable to sleep, not wanting to go anywhere near a wrench, or even a steering wheel. The amount of space it takes up in my head, making it hard to focus on other areas of life from time to time. Does that ever happen to anyone else?
Prior to the last couple years, where I really started to pile on the projects, I used to love CrossFit and ran all the popular endurance competitions: Tought Mudder, Spartan Race, etc. Too much time in the garage has led to injuries that make it more difficult to perform the same movements I used to perform with ease (I can't even remember the last time I tried to perform a handstand push-up lol)... it's like I traded one beloved hobby, for another, far more expensive hobby...
Which leads me to the important question I've been asking myself lately: is it really worth it?
I understand this is a very negative take on a long-loved hobby. But I figured if anyone would understand, it would be here. I would love to hear some struggles you folks have gone through and what you did to get passed them.