Does anyone have a suggested handlheld fire bottle and mounting system?
Also what year Helmets are required this year?
Does anyone have a suggested handlheld fire bottle and mounting system?
Also what year Helmets are required this year?
Bryan Leinart
CMC #24
Anyone have a suggestion on a helmet let me know. Been a long time since I've looked and I have to have a newer one. Been looking more at MX helmets.
Going to try and find a handheld that's legal since I'll need it next year then have time to figure out updating the fire system or swapping the one from the white car. Does this work?
https://www.ioportracing.com/fire-ex...-with-bracket/
Or do I also need one of their other brackets to be legal?
https://www.ioportracing.com/fire-ex...racket-in-red/
https://www.ioportracing.com/fire-ex...legal-allstar/
Bryan Leinart
CMC #24
I just bought the HJC H70. Wore it in Houston and it was comfortable with good visibility. With visor down it's also extremely quiet, caught me off guard for a moment. I literally thought I had an issue with the car. I mainly bought due to the top air option, I was dying in some races last year even with a cool shirt. It wasn't needed in Houston so can't comment on its effectiveness yet so will see. Overall price seems a mid tier choice, still hurt to buy when my old Aria seems fine but not too bad.
Can anyone tell me other than comfort the difference in a $200.00 helmet and a $900.00 helmet? They all have to pass the same test. Are any of the more expensive helmets rated higher in crash test? Are they safer? I know the old saying "do you have a $100.00 head or a $1000.00 head" the motorcycle shops used to put on us in my MX days but are you safer in a high dollar helmet?
JJ
All rated helmets pass the same test. The test is pass/fail at least as far as the public is told. Some helmets may or may not be safer but it probably doesn't track with the price. Really expensive helmets are lighter and that is generically safer but that's mostly been negated by head and neck devices.
Above that, you can get helmets with additional features like air intake, venting, audio input, drink tube input, etc. These features add cost. You could argue that keeping hydrated and cool is safer than crashing when your brain gets foggy. Having someone tell you over the radio about cautions/track issues can also be safer.
There are also fitment questions. People have not only different sized heads but different shaped heads. Proper fitment is important to safety.
Beyond that, nicer helmets are just more comfortable. As long as you never put something like a Stilo helmet on your head, you probably won't even notice that your cheap helmet sucks. I went a little cheaper on my helmet this time but added an air intake and a blower system in my car. Every time I put my helmet on I go "Wow, you cheap bastard" and then go drive and don't really notice it...
Richard P.
Thanks Richard,
I read a ton on the subject yesterday and from what I gathered helmet fit is way more important than how much you spend. Most I'm told wear a helmet that is way too loose. I know I am guilty of that.
JJ
The air flow helps in three ways, limits the fogging, gets somewhat cooler temps in the helmet depending on your source, and blows the carbon dioxide out. Dan loves it, Heather swears by it especially after she broke her clutch at Hallett and had to sit in the car for four laps.
Craig
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