Many drivers see checking the gear as if it were a box. Helmet: check. Gloves: check. Show up and drive. But that is not the idea. The correct motorsport essentials not only maintain your compliance – they make you faster because they eliminate physical and cognitive resistance that you accumulate during a session.
Weight Matters More Than You Think
Your head weighs about 5kg. When you’re cornering at 2G, that becomes the equivalent of 10kg bearing down on your neck muscles. Do this for thirty laps. Come the final stint, your focus moves from hitting the apex to the distracting pain of that dull ache in your shoulders – and that split attention costs you time.
A composite race helmet can help. Carbon fibre shells are able to reduce helmet mass to 1,200g or even less without any compromise to the performance required to dissipate energy and protect you, the driver. It doesn’t sound like a big weight saving but, after an hour’s driving at track speeds, it absolutely is. For drivers making that step up, looking at schuberth racing and go kart helmets or comparable options from specialist manufacturers gives a clear sense of how carbon shell construction and aerodynamic profiling can meaningfully reduce the physical load on your neck across a full session. If you’re entering endurance karting or making the step from club level track days into competition, this is the first performance upgrade you should buy – not the last.
Ventilation Isn’t Comfort, It’s Cognition
Temperatures inside sealed cars can become very high, and sustained heat exposure can increase your heart rate significantly (Motorsport Medicine Research). Before you realize it, your ability to process the information that the car ahead is braking or that your rear is stepping out has started to degrade. You just feel that you’re okay. And that you’re slower.
A well-designed helmet ventilation system will provide fresh cooling air across your head and face, exhaling warm air through the back. That will prevent CO2 levels from rising around your mouth and the inside of the visor from fogging up, obviating the need to crack it open. It’s a mechanical solution to a physiological problem, but that flat out works.
The right visor is also crucial. An amber-tinted visor under flat, overcast light at corner entry will enhance contrast. A dark smoke visor on a bright late afternoon will prevent that half-second of glare blindness from late braking. The right visor choice isn’t a luxury. It changes how much information your visual cortex can actually work with at speed.
The Helmet Fit Question People Skip
A helmet that’s technically certified but poorly fitted is a compromised piece of kit. Pressure points – usually at the temples or crown – seem minor on the pit lane. At 160kph on a long straight, they occupy part of your attention. Over a session, that cumulative distraction is measurable.
Interchangeable cheek pads allow you to dial in fit precisely rather than accepting what the shell geometry gives you. A correctly fitted helmet also sits stable through high-speed buffeting without head wobble, which reduces neck fatigue further. When you’re looking at the transition from entry-level track days into competitive karting or circuit racing, schuberth racing and go kart helmets carry FIA 8859-2015 and SNELL SA2020 certifications alongside aerodynamic profiles built specifically for open cockpit exposure – where buffeting and neck load is significantly higher than in a saloon car.
HANS device compatibility is non-negotiable if you’re running at any serious event. The anchor points need to work with your specific helmet model. Confirm this before you buy either piece of kit, not after.
Apparel Is Sensory Equipment
Nomex suits, gloves, and boots are sold based on fire protection ratings. That’s all accurate and vital. But the real performance argument for getting the right gear is about sensation, not safety.
Thinner-soled, FIA-approved driving shoes will give you infinitely more pedal feel than a workboot ever will. Heel-and-toe downshifts require precise metatarsal contact with the brake pedal. If your boot sole is cushioned by layers of stiff leather or foam before that feedback reaches your foot, you’re making corrections based on incomplete information. Think of gloves the same way for steering – the tiny vibrations you get through the wheel are often the only warning you’ll get when the car is about to lose grip.
Tyre Management Is Gear Too
A list of things you need for the track day doesn’t usually include a good tyre gauge. It absolutely should. Tyre pressure goes up a shocking amount across a hot session because the tyre gets hotter and the carcass gets more stressed. If you check pressure as soon as you come off track – meaning before your tyres have had a chance to cool – you get an idea of how you’ve been using the contact patch with your driving.
Are fronts consistently too high compared to rears post session? Then you’re asking the fronts to do more work than they’ve been configured to. And you can act on that. An analogue gauge is cheap as chips relative to tyres and closes a feedback loop most track day guys don’t even know they’ve left swinging in the breeze.
Gear-as-compliance robs you of more performance than you know. A physical load-removing or sensory input-improving item of gear is freeing your brain with more capacity that goes straight into improving your driving. And that’s where the time and fun is.


