When it comes to racing and cars I have always been a player. Sure I had my type, manufactured in the 80's or 90's RWD cheep, but I never stuck with a particular car or racing discipline for long. I would set a goal, persue it, meet it, and move on. I wanted to try as many kinds of racing and types of cars I could. To demonstrate this, here is a brief car/racing history.
2004 purchased my first sports car,a $1100 944 off ebay, and did my first autocross.
2005 I sold the 944, got a MR2, and did a full season of autocross with the SCCA
2006 I did an autocross with SCCA and NWAA ( a small local club), taught at my first Teen driving school, raced my first rallycross and hillclimb, and then sold the MR2. I then purchased a WRX. I know, not my type
2007 I did a season of autocross with NWAA. No rallycross of hillclimbs this year because I owed on my WRX which I sold and bought my first house. I did purchase my old MR2 back
2008 I did some rallycross, sold my MR2, and built a SR20DET powered 240sx
2009 I made some minor tweaks to the 240 then took it to Bonneville to run in the 130mph club class
2010 Brought more tweeks to the 240 then a full season of rallycross in MR2
2011 I sold the 240, picked up a 85 Rx7 GSL-SE, and set it up for hillclimbing. I planned on running a full season but tore my shoulder. mInstead I managed to pull off a track day before having surgery
2012 With the shoulder fixed, I run the RX7 in the Northwest Hillclimb Association hillclimb championship. I made it to 5 of 8 events in 3 of 5 states. I lost the championship lead to a broken lower control arm in Bogs Basin ID. Dispite only making 5 of 8 events and geting the tow pick-up's fuel from my co-drivers company at $1 a gallon, I still spent twice as much mony as I can justify spending on racing.
At this point in my life, I relised that I need a long term relationship with a car and a particular form of racing. I have two criteria; it has to be fun and it has to be a cheap date.
As far as the car goes, I think my GSL-SE fits the bill. Besides, the cheepest race car is the one you already own. For the racing, rallycross has to be it. I can do a full season of local events and go to nationals in OK for 1k less than I spent on hillclimbs last year. This depends on finding a co-driver for nationals.
After all that, we come to the purpas of this thread; to document my adventurs in rallycross and to pass on what I've learned to anyone interested in the combination of rallycross and magical spinning triangels.