I live in Manhattan and don’t have a tow vehicle, so I’ve been driving the race car to vintage racing and BMW CCA club race weekends. I have a pretty bare-bones set-up:
(1) Helmet bag with room for helmet, HANS, and spare visor. I have a set of custom-molded ear protection that stays with the helmet. I also keep my credentials (race license and logbook) in a side pocket.
(2) Small duffel with nomex suit, underwear, shoes, socks (2 pair), balaclava (2), and gloves. Bottle of sunscreen and mosquito repellent in the side pocket. I also generally keep a camping-style rain jacket and pants in there.
(3) Rain tires on the car. Race tires in the car: one in the spare tire well and three in the backseat area.
(4) Toolbox with torque wrench, breaker bar, impact sockets, box-end wrenches, vice grips, flashlight, and the appropriate tools to swap pads. Also two sets of mechanics gloves.
(5) aluminum low-profile floor jack and two plastic wheel chocks.
(6) small milk crate with race pads, spare brake fluid, and engine oil. Also foaming window cleaner, rain-x, quick detail spray, pack of microfiber towels, and several pairs of vinyl gloves. I also keep a longacre tire gauge and tire temp probe thingy in there.
(7) two collapsible chairs, a full-sized golf umbrella, and a small camping tent.
(8) battery jump pack.
(9) Milwaukee cordless impact gun. Expensive but totally worth it!
(10) Small camera bag with a pair of GoPro Hero cams, spare batteries, charger, and various accessories.
That’s it. Just about everything fits in the trunk, which is large for a race car (an old Benz sedan). I drive to the event on my rain tires and street pads. When I get to the track, I empty the car, set up the tent, and put all the gear in it. I live in the northeast, so rain is common and I like to keep my stuff dry.
Then all I need to do is jack up the car, swap in the race pads, and switch to the dry tires. The whole process from pulling into the paddock to having all my gear stowed and the car race-ready doesn’t take more than an hour.