Background: For a few years I was a national tech inspector. And for quite a while i raced in FC at regional, national, majors levels.
Yesterday I was at lunch with a bunch of other national stewards, Usually we talk about how it is amazing how some people are allowed on race tracks at all. Usually we expand on the most recent track incident. Or, how most drivers have never read the GCR. We never run out of fresh material at these lunches. LOL
We got to talking about how NASA has now created a "street class" for their track days, the only requirement to bring your C8 ZR1 out to crest T9 at Road Atlanta at 160+ mph is that it have license plates and DOT tires. Obviously you can run just about any car as long as it has a valid license plate. SCCA has Track Nights and TT also. So it is playing this game also.
Well, the first thing one ol' timer said was, "somebody is going to get killed". Agreeing nods all around.
But, the devil-in-me said, "Wait one darn second... they can go screaming around on the track with other cars and not have to have FIA approved rain lights, seatbelts less than 25 months old, inspected fire bottles, HANS devices, and approved roll bars !!!! say wat???".
You can show up with something like a 1991 Honda Civic Si with seat belts 34 years old and go out on the track with other cars. Oh... its "safe" because of "point-by passing". Give me a break. Those cars can hit a concrete wall harder than a 1000# formula car (because they are heavier), yet they don't have to have mandated safety stuff. I guess there is no chance they can catch on fire, so no need for fuel cells nor fire systems. And their non-FIA approved tail lights are good enough. I guess participants in track days or track nights never run out of talent, so accidents never happen, so all that darn safety equipment isn't needed.
What's my point? Something about good for the goose also being good for the gander, I'm not sure. Maybe I'm just a grouchy old curmudgeon with access to the interweb.
I'm done ranting. Back to you regularly scheduled programming.