|
Home | Rules & Guidelines | Register | Member Rides | FAQ | Members List | Social Groups | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
Motorsports and Skilled Driving Discussion for Organized Racing and motorsports and tips and techniques at becoming a better driver. |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
10-14-2014, 08:57 PM | #1 |
Leaky Injector
|
Drifting and Autocross insurance
For the people on here that hold their own events such as drifting or autocross who do you use for an insurance company for the motorsport event? I've been searching through this forum and Google and really can't seem to find a definite answer. Thanks mates! Trying to get the motorsport scene around the central Texas area more coverage, people tend to have to drive 3-5hrs for an event that they cannot afford since they're starting out in the scene and trying to get their foot in the water. I have a small location with a lot size of 7 acres that could help a lot of drivers with transitioning skills; the location is around a military base full of auto enthusiast that are trying to get into the sport, I'm not looking to earn any sort of monetary profit but truly just offer a place where noobies can learn some technical skill and get some seat time legally.
|
Sponsored Links |
10-14-2014, 10:36 PM | #2 |
AFC #1
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: 昨晩あなたのお母さんの家
Posts: 20,181
Trader Rating: (3)
Feedback Score: 3 reviews
|
You will want insurance unless you want to loose your 7 acres and anything else you own. I would also consider forming a LLC to protect yourself even more. Will make insurance easier.
How far is this place from civilization? Medical staff is also something you may want to research. Maybe required by insurance or make your insurance rate cheaper. The sad reality is that there are a lot of idiots and litigious people out there and you have to protect yourself. It will make the events more expensive but, the drivers will understand its to protect the future of the events. Sent from my iFad using Crapatalk
__________________
Comments should be taken as Opinions not as Statements of Fact |
10-17-2014, 12:48 PM | #4 |
AFC #1
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: 昨晩あなたのお母さんの家
Posts: 20,181
Trader Rating: (3)
Feedback Score: 3 reviews
|
Wavers are usually required by the insurance company. They aren't worth the paper they are printed on if you don't have a lawyer to back them up when you get sued.
__________________
Comments should be taken as Opinions not as Statements of Fact |
10-20-2014, 07:07 PM | #5 |
Zilvia Junkie
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: evansville, in
Posts: 391
Trader Rating: (4)
Feedback Score: 4 reviews
|
That's a novel idea. But do you know how much does it cost just to pave just for one acre? We are talking hundred grand easily. Much cheaper to rent. Then the permit , laws and on and on. Suggest you talk to the mayor and business council in your area. Good luck .
|
10-31-2014, 04:49 AM | #6 |
Leaky Injector
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: AZ/ South Korea
Age: 33
Posts: 121
Trader Rating: (0)
Feedback Score: 0 reviews
|
Honestly it will be much cheaper and easier for you to try and rent out a small track for a day maybe once a month. I don't know all the serious info behind the scenes but I know here in AZ we have a group that rents a local go-kart track the first weekend of every month and usually stays around 80 dollars per driver. The track will already have everything you need and you are basically paying them to use their services(insurance and medical crew) more than actually paying for the track itself. It's also great for the go-kart guys, they love when we leave fresh sticky rubber all over the track haha. It's a small track but you'd be surprised how much better you will get having such tight corners and we have a few 60 mph entry corners surprisingly for such a small track.
|
Bookmarks |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|