Okay, so lets assume I get a kart for £2000. What series is that for? How many spares will I need to buy? How long to chassis last, and how long between engine rebuilds (which I'd do myself, but I'd still need new bits)... Then throw in more races, at slightly more per weekend, and it quickly becomes more expensive. But as I said (which you clearly didn't read) I mean afford in more than just money terms.
All club racing is more about the driver than the car.
I have several videos, but not all show that much because the camera was either stuck at one corner (camcorder) or broke (onboard). I do have a video of Rockingham, in which there is close racing until I spin avoiding an accident. If the camera had fecking worked at Silverstone, Brands and at Snetterton then I'd have lots of great, close racing to show you (not so much at Snetterton, but it was a damn good pass in the end
).
At the back of the grids (where I was in my first race) it's old and young men with lots of money, not much time and very little talent, either mechanical or driving. At the front* (where I was in all other races, apart from Rockingham after my spin) then it's actually younger men with time and money, and experience and skills. Some use nitrogen in their tyres. So have very advanced data logging. Some have articulated lorries. It's pretty much like actual British F3 was in the late 80s and early 90s - small teams, not much track time, not big budgets.
*front is a relative term. Our car is the second oldest on the grid, and it was unreasonable to expect to race with 1998 - 2001 Dallara F3 cars in my first season when they've been doing it for years. But I was generally 'best of the rest' behind them.
There might be lots of karts over a short time, but there is still very little risk, and with risk comes adrenaline. I just don't find karts that interesting to watch, read about or work on. Most bicycles are more advanced these days. They're a good laugh with mates (or at LFS meetings), but I wouldn't pay to do it.
If you knew anything about cars (you clearly don't
) then you'd understand that hours that go into improvments. The calculations. The many interelated setup options. Does it make the car faster? We think so, but at the same time it could be all down to me getting better. With a season under my belt my driving should have levelled off a bit, and we'll be able to see if the changes to the car do make a difference.
The wages thing I can understand. What I can't get is how you sometimes pretend to be an engineer, and then you sometimes say you aren't. Your replies give the impression that you aren't. In fact, they give the impression you're still in primary school.