f_ said:
Hello, I'm new to the world of motorsports and I had a couple of questions. Forgive me if these are stupid questions, but I couldn't really find answers for them online.
1. Do people generally compete in different types of motorsports (such as Autocross, Road Racing, &, Rallycross) or do they stick to one?
2. I've read on these forums that generally it would be best to have different cars for Autocross and Rallycross. But in the case of Autocross and Road Racing/Time Trials, do people generally use one car for both autocross and road racing/time trials or do they typically have different cars for each? And if they do have different cars, is it because their car might not be competitive when transitioning from Autocross to RR/TT or vice versa?
3. And finally are autocross cars built differently than RR/TT cars similar to how rallycross cars are different than autocross cars?
1. I think they do. Personnaly, I started with autocrossing because it's the cheapest and safest way to break into motorsports (IMHO). Eventually, after a few trackdays, I realized I started getting bored with how slow autocross is and how absolutely f*****d the classing is in autocross and now I exclusively do road racing/TT.
2. I can't speak for Rallycross, but I would say in general (obviously this is platform dependent) you can make a great dual duty TT/Autocross car that would be say ~90% optimized for both with a few alignment changes. That works for most people. If your goals is to be nationally competitive, then I believe you must have a car built for the kind of racing you do (not to mention classing restrictions).
3. Again, can't comment on rallycross, but in general an autocross car is set up to be very loose. You want low-speed rotation over high speed stability. There's less braking zones (or at least less speed) so negative camber will likely be more in autocross than in road racing.
TLDR: If you aren't worried about being nationally competitive, you will have no problem at all building a car that does well at both, but may not be the best at either.