Ok, this isn't for my immediate plans but more like something to look forward to in the next few years plus. I've been tracking my sti since I got it new back in December of 2005, and although I love it and it is rewarding to drive, the costs and realities of lots of track time in the heavy sti do take their toll.
After driving many other cars over the years and some great student cars at the track, I'm now contemplating what would be a good daily driver track car with more emphasis on track duty and reduced wear items costs for track duty.
My first reaction is spec/track prepped miata, but honestly since it would be a car to take out on regular life drives too, that may be a little hardcore and small for me daily (6ft 190lbs). Same with an Elise. I love both and know they're easy on tires and brakes (in the sti I go through pads every 2-3 track days), but the light weight small car trade off is less easy to deal with in life. Not to mention crash worthiness in SUV land. That said too, whatever it would be would be a second car. Not primarily a daily chore car, but would need to serve duty 3-4 or more days of a week... Life depending and may play the role of daily chore car at times.
So what about a c5 Z06??? The notion that consumables are cheap and can be had at napa, is that a reality? What about Porsches? 911? Cayman S?
All used of course. Anything else to consider? S2000, Nsx, etc.
I like the idea of reliable, easy on parts, light-ish weigt, but I know you have to compromise something. I just want more or a planted sports car feel at the track that I get in other cars and something that won't totally destroy my wallet or be prohibitive cost-wise to enjoy on the track or in life. Don't get me wrong I love the bear climbing a tree feel from the sti out of turns, but you know... The grass is always greener and all that.
Mid, rear, front engined doesn't make much difference, awd or rwd is fine.
If anyone is curious more on my car and my journey here: http://www.iwsti.com/forums/gd-membe...ate-defis.html
When I consider a Porsche or NSX, I'm definitely not thinking new-ish, and for me probably about 45K max on spending budget. Granted this would be a few years down the road, and everything will change, but I can't help think about it now of course, and try to mentally plan ahead and get as much info as I can.
I don't think at this point a dedicated track car is a reality, but you never know. I'd love to consider a radical, or something that could be trailered out, but that means having to get a vehicle capable of towing, a trailer, and all the paraphernalia that goes with a track only car. Not in the cards for me I think.
I need something that treads the line like the STi can, but isn't quite so hard on its parts.
It's a conundrum for sure. Fast? Powerful? Hard on brakes... Light, small, hard to live with day to day? OR... not as fast as I am used to. That said... driving Elises and spec Miatas is just as fun on the track as my car (never driven an NSX on track, but plenty on street). They just feel a little anemic on straights... maybe forced induction would solve that.
I find myself rationalizing new parts for the STi, then thinking... save it for the next car at this point. Whatever it will be, will have to driven regularly, so that alone makes some less likely than others.
After driving many other cars over the years and some great student cars at the track, I'm now contemplating what would be a good daily driver track car with more emphasis on track duty and reduced wear items costs for track duty.
My first reaction is spec/track prepped miata, but honestly since it would be a car to take out on regular life drives too, that may be a little hardcore and small for me daily (6ft 190lbs). Same with an Elise. I love both and know they're easy on tires and brakes (in the sti I go through pads every 2-3 track days), but the light weight small car trade off is less easy to deal with in life. Not to mention crash worthiness in SUV land. That said too, whatever it would be would be a second car. Not primarily a daily chore car, but would need to serve duty 3-4 or more days of a week... Life depending and may play the role of daily chore car at times.
So what about a c5 Z06??? The notion that consumables are cheap and can be had at napa, is that a reality? What about Porsches? 911? Cayman S?
All used of course. Anything else to consider? S2000, Nsx, etc.
I like the idea of reliable, easy on parts, light-ish weigt, but I know you have to compromise something. I just want more or a planted sports car feel at the track that I get in other cars and something that won't totally destroy my wallet or be prohibitive cost-wise to enjoy on the track or in life. Don't get me wrong I love the bear climbing a tree feel from the sti out of turns, but you know... The grass is always greener and all that.
Mid, rear, front engined doesn't make much difference, awd or rwd is fine.
If anyone is curious more on my car and my journey here: http://www.iwsti.com/forums/gd-membe...ate-defis.html
When I consider a Porsche or NSX, I'm definitely not thinking new-ish, and for me probably about 45K max on spending budget. Granted this would be a few years down the road, and everything will change, but I can't help think about it now of course, and try to mentally plan ahead and get as much info as I can.
I don't think at this point a dedicated track car is a reality, but you never know. I'd love to consider a radical, or something that could be trailered out, but that means having to get a vehicle capable of towing, a trailer, and all the paraphernalia that goes with a track only car. Not in the cards for me I think.
I need something that treads the line like the STi can, but isn't quite so hard on its parts.
It's a conundrum for sure. Fast? Powerful? Hard on brakes... Light, small, hard to live with day to day? OR... not as fast as I am used to. That said... driving Elises and spec Miatas is just as fun on the track as my car (never driven an NSX on track, but plenty on street). They just feel a little anemic on straights... maybe forced induction would solve that.
I find myself rationalizing new parts for the STi, then thinking... save it for the next car at this point. Whatever it will be, will have to driven regularly, so that alone makes some less likely than others.