Almost 5M views! Thank you guys. Please Subscribe to my Channel and add like to the video 🙏🏼 P.s: the history about the Pagani driver as Horacio's son, isn't confirmed and seems fake. I'm going to found the Truth about this. The Pagani driver seems more to be Andrea Palma, Pagani official driver.
@@n8tehgr8est yup you sign a waiver. That pagani guy very likely has to foot his own bill. Hell, most insurance companies don't even cover track days so he most likely will have to fix it or of pocket. Yeesh
@@minepoi0115 The car he hit is not a 'regular' Huayra, it is a Huayra BC. $3,500,000 without options... Over $4m with options. Makes it so much more painful to watch now doesn't it?
@@DanSong47 ´What does that even mean ? ofc if he has that much money to get one its not hes last cash and the bank prolly has alot more. If you rich enough material dmg wont bother you. You must be some kind of broky i swear
@@MadQmike Not really. Maybe he has it on leasing or a monthly plan. Owning something doesn't mean you can just afford all damage to it. I can own a house and buy one, but I may not be able to cover damages because I bought the house and now have no money. That is what he meant. Ownership does not mean one can just cover any damage and maybe buy a new one. In this case though, to my knowledge, the driver of the Pagani was the son of the founder of said car company.
ツSinejomoniror 🤦♂️ you do realize what it takes to a)being on the list to get a GT2 RS b)at this price level for a car, nobody has “financial” issues.
From what I've heard about this, the driver of the Pagani seen being hit is actually the son of Horacio Pagani. The driver of the Porsche's brakes failed and the driver was devastated because of the accident alongside the horrific bill the he would face for the incident. However, Pagani's son was very calm about the accident and went over to calm and reassure him. Pagani's son later covered the damages for both vehicles in the incident.
You would not face a horrific bill - you are responsible for your own damage only on track days. So if you get wiped out by a newbie in a Citroen 2CV - thats your problem.
I don't buy the "brakes failed" story - he was trying to make the corner but with a really bad line choice. If the brakes failed he could have gone straight (to the left of the Pagani) and into the run out and probably avoided all that damage.
Lol we are talking here about Porsche gt2rs. You can do 1000 launchcontrols daily and doesnt effect engine the car is maded for pushing to the limit on tracks and you think the brakes failed ? 🤣
Naaa, the gt2 guy can afford to fix the pagani bc. Only problem is 10 years of his lifespan will go out the window just throwing away about 3 million dollars on his and the other guys car. Sad though.
@@philips6182 please bro, dont say that until I drive a gt3 rs, gt3 touring and regular 991.2 gt3. The gt2 rs handles very strange. But if u like scaring urself silly, gt2 it is.
*Music starts playing* At the starting of the week At summit talks you'll hear them speak It's only Monday Negotiations breaking down See those leaders start to frown It's sword and gun day
For anyone wondering the driver of the Pagani is the son of the CEO of Pagani and he payed for both cars since the crash wasn't done on purpose if I'm not mistaken he even took the Porsche driver out for coffee
@@bostic8683 everybody pays his own damage on a race track. It doesn't matter who made the mistake. The insurance pays nothing when you drive you car at a race track. You also have to pay if you damage the course and you have to pay the tow truck. When you pay your ticket for the track you have to sign a contract with all this points. Only at official races you need a race insurance but she is very expensive. When you only damage your own car you use the insurance for your car only if the damage is high. As example when the damage is more then 50.000 at your 250.000 car you use the insurance. All smaller damage is cheaper to pay it private.
He's most likely thinking how much the leasing company still owes and how many years he'll have to work to pay back them and to refund the Pagani's owner ...
For those who don’t know that is the owner of Pagani’s son. And the Porsches breaks failed, the son of Pagani said he would pay for all the damages. Very nice guy. 😊
@@kilp2635 I need to lie to tell you so I don’t know. But if it’s not a real sponsored race, then I guess whoever causes the crash, has to pay for it. Thats why the driver in the video broke down and as I wrote before, the other one offered to pay for both damages, since he is the son of the CEO
@@supertouring22 'It's no questions asked' in the sense , that they don't consider where the crash happened or the physiological condition of the driver and the victims. Any and every damage done with the car will be paid as long as there is no evidence of intent from the driver.
He owes nothing - on track days you sign a waiver accepting that hitting another car is a risk that might happen, and that you take all the responsibility for that. He can buy supplemental insurance for his own car, but a $3M+ Pagani likely isn't covered on track (most track policies end at $500K). Though if it's repairable, and he had some smaller coverage, he might be okay. More than likely he had zero coverage though (pretty normal on track). Either way the Porsche guy is more crying about his own car than the Pagani - fixing a GT2RS is not going to be cheap either, and he might even get banned from future track days (at least with that org) - he was pretty reckless dive bombing that corner. I run track events and would likely ban him for a dumb move like that.
@@luisaki1693 So many comments showed that people didn't understand how it works, so I was providing clarification. I think a lot of people think that they have some protection on track (i.e. the organizer or other driver will help them), but the reality is that there are no protections - not even (usually) from your regular car insurance. In practice incidents like this rarely happen, but just didn't want anyone thinking (joking or not) that the Porsche guy would actually owe anyone for damage to the other car... Also not sure that Jeffrey was actually joking! :)
I second this. Either way the gt2 guy is 99% not likely going to be liable for the pagani’s damage and he’s definitely upset about his own gt2. (Anyone tracking a pagani can definitely find a way to get covered under a track insurance policy, however). Judging by this video it looks like the gt2 dude may have not even taken out some track insurance on his own car. If he did I doubt he would by on the ground crying his ass off
@@zks2341 Agreed with no coverage even from your regular insurance but this comment is more for other people reading: track day insurance exists. It usually costs around $200 a day and covers an agreed value for your vehicle for damage done on track. Companies like Hagerty, RLI, etc. offer it and it is well worth it if you track anything that's not a beater. This insurance covers your vehicle/modifications only as ZKS is right, generally trackdays are at your own risk, there is no fault and thus no responsible party.
@@jwalster9412 I was talking about Italian. I’m Italian and Pistachio is Pistacchio in Italian. That’s it. Didn’t know what you’re talking about. Hello Future!
@Phillip1310 insurance does not cover ANYTHING that happens on a race track. You have to sign a waiver acknowledging the fact that it at your own risk.
@@sevenhazee is correct, and your insurance policy probably has it defined that it is not covered, no matter what type of liability waiver or paperwork the track requires you to submit. If this guy crashed into the Pagani on a road, he would pay his deductible. Crashing on the Track means... well... the Pagani owner is in a much better situation than the porsche owner, unless they decide to pay their own repairs each.
@Phillip1310 what does being an american have to do with anything you racist fuck? Pay for Pagani and Porsche I highly doubt it, second look at his reaction, if it wasn't a big deal why he reacted like that? And 3rd if the car isn't his I doubt he's gonna get pat on the back
The fact that the door came open during this crash so easy on his Pagani made me go to the dealership to have my Zonda safety checked. Well After driving 16+ Hours to the closest dealership in Miami Florida and spending a whole 2 days testing...it turns out everything was sturdy and crash ready. Oh and to my disappointment apparently I drive a Mazda 3S.
The one in the pagani was the son of the founder itself, so he said to the guy that he will pay for the repair and not to worry. Such a nice move from him
Because of all the special orders, there’s way more than 20 Huayra BC’s out in the wild. Some may not be officially called a “BC”, but they’re specced like one
The damage doesn't look that bad, it's probably mostly cosmetical. Probably still a few houndred thousand dollars but Pagani can most likely bring the car back to normal
I don't think anyone is buying a Pagani for the safety features. Seen ferrari's and the like in crashes? I've seen many pics of those high end cars completely ripped in half.
@@Alan_is_here i know your comment was half a year ago, but the internet has no boundaries and you’re silly to think it does and be sensitive to boundaries that don’t exist. also, pagani driver paid all the expenses so all these comments are therefore funny in your world. but to me, they’re funny either way.
Guy in the Porsche: "I crashed a car." Insurance company: "Ok, no problem. What car was it?" Guy in the Porsche: "A Pagani Huayra worth $5 million dollars." Insurance company: "Hahaha, you're a good joker, man. So, what car was it really?" Guy in the Porsche: "It's not a joke, man." Insurance company: "We can bet $100,000 that it's not true." Guy in the Porsche: "Ok" and thought, ":) I AM SAVED :)"
Guess it's really just gone, like he has to pay for the repair for the porsche and for the pagani which is way more expensive. That's been a really expensive lap
@@rupty6573 he doesn’t need to pay for anything, they sign waivers before going on the track if you hit someone you’re not responsible for the damage or costs.
“Hmmm, I wonder what this grass tastes like” The old pretending to be a cow trick to get out of having to pay for damages (remember, cows are legally not liable and not forbidden to drive cars)
@@igortchelzoff3736 It's a shame, but cars in this price bracket like the Pagani's for the majority are aimed at the type of customers that will keeped them locked up. Being terribly expensive just makes it terrifying to drive let alone track it.
for real lmao!! I was on the way to O'Hare the other day and traffic was backed up and it was because some dude in an 08 malibu rear ended a Rolls Royce Wraith i bet his insurance said the same thing! lmao!
@ Henry: in Germany it does ! My normal day-to-day car insurance covers my track days as well IF the event is stated by its organizers to not be one where "the reaching of maximum speeds is attempted". In other words, every leisure track day is covered by my normal day-to-day car insurance without having to add any extra clauses. I checked with them.
I love how calm the guy in the Pagani was. He probably had a backup Pagani in the parking lot. Unfortunate crash but track day rule #1 is don’t exit ur car on a hot track unless it’s on fire!
@@MegaSturrup He has a good point. Just sitting there bare bones with a T-shirt on is dangerous AF. If somebody els goes off you're all sorts of broken. Stay in the safety of your car incase of a follow up hit. Good chance you left oil on the road.
For those wondering the reason hes so calm is because the owner of the pagani is horacios son and the porsche driver had mechanical error and his breaks failed causing him to turn around the cofner with to much speed
@@dragosmaxim940 it's a guy that owns an exotic car rental business, he also has a RU-vid channel. Lots of videos of him getting trashed cars back from renters lol