What to Bring to an HPDE

An HPDE is a full track day — typically 8–10 hours at a real road course, with 20–30 minute sessions on track. The preparation requirements are meaningfully higher than autocross. Your car is going to be pushed harder, for longer, at higher speeds. A brake pad that survives an autocross won't necessarily survive a full HPDE day. Plan accordingly.

Gear by Run Group

What you're required to bring depends on your run group. Requirements escalate as you advance. Check with your specific organizer — NASA, GridLife, and regional clubs can vary.

ItemHPDE 1–2HPDE 3HPDE 4 / TT
Helmet (SA-rated)RequiredRequiredRequired
Driving GlovesRecommendedOften requiredRequired
Driving ShoesRecommendedOften requiredRequired
Driving SuitNot requiredNot requiredRequired at some orgs
HANS DeviceNot requiredNot requiredRequired with harness
Fire ExtinguisherPaddock recommendedPaddock recommendedIn-car sometimes required
Verify requirements with your specific organizer

NASA, GridLife, and regional clubs update their rules annually. The table above is a general guide — always confirm requirements with the event organizer before you show up.

Car Prep — Do This Before You Leave Home

Tech inspection at an HPDE is more thorough than at autocross. Inspectors are checking things that matter at 100+ mph. Don't show up hoping to fix something in the paddock.

Tools and Spares

You're at a track, not a parking lot. If something breaks, a paddock vendor may not be nearby. Bring what you'd need to address the most likely failure modes for your car.

Run groups have cool-down requirements

After each session, let your brakes and engine cool before working on them. Most orgs require you to keep the car running at idle for a few minutes after coming off track. Don't reach for the brake caliper immediately — they can be hot enough to burn through gloves.

Paddock Setup

You'll be at the track all day — often 7am to 5pm or later. Come set up to be comfortable and organized in your paddock spot.

Data and Video

HPDE is about improvement. Video and data make improvement dramatically faster — you can see exactly where you're losing time and what your instructor is pointing out.

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