I purchased 3 Motorola Radius GP300 8 channel UHF radios in 2005. For $200, I got the 3 radios, 3 chargers, and 6 batteries. eBay!
That said, I was lucky that the frequencies happened to work out and I didn't have to go pay someone to change them. I bought a car harness, a crew headset, and a couple helmet setups from Sampson. They provided excellent telephone sales support and quality components.
For the price of a 2 radio starter set (with low-end radios), I got a complete 3 radio set with top quality radios.
These 5 watt radios have 100% coverage on Pacific Raceways, which has some elevation change and some areas that are definitely not "line of sight" from the paddock area. So far, I have not felt the need to put an external antenna on the car.
As a lifetime ham radio operator and someone who has worked in the land mobile radio service, I have seen a lot of radios, good and bad. I suggest buying the highest quality radios you can find, and I would put Motorola at the top of the list. There is a reason why they have been the first choice of professionals for decades.
A few weeks ago at the 8 Hours of the Cascades endurance race in Portland, OR, one of my Motorolas was dropped from the top of our team truck (about 15 feet) onto the pavement. The case has a small dent in a corner, but the radio is working fine.
If you can't find reasonably priced Motorola radios, the Icom and Vertex radios are also good quality, and I would buy them in that order of preference, based on my experiences over the years. Any other brands are questionable in my opinion.
As for VHF vs. UHF - it typically won't matter much for racing applications. With 2+ watts and an external antenna, you should have adequate coverage on virtually any racetrack. I prefer UHF because of the smaller antenna size for comparable performance.
I agree with Marshall that the antenna is key. The antenna is the first place to make improvements if your range is not adequate. Putting a 1/4 wave whip on the roof will make a HUGE difference in coverage compared to using a "rubber ducky" flexible whip on the radio mounted in the car.
If your mounting point for the external antenna is not on a metal surface, that won't work either without special considerations. You either need to find a metal panel to mount the antenna on, or get some metal foil tape to put under the mounting area (like inside the roof or trunk lid). Use at least 4 strips of the metal tape, at least 1/4 wavelength long (as long as the antenna), and make sure you connect the metal tape to the shield of the feed line at the antenna base. Orient the tape in an "X" with the antenna mounted in the center. Keep the feed line as short as possible, and cut to length rather than coiling up excess, especially with UHF.
If the external antenna on the car still doesn't give you the coverage you need, consider a small "base station" antenna. You can mount it on a 10 foot TV mast you can get a Radio Shack for a few bucks. Or use a piece of conduit. Anything to get it up a few feet in the air. Stick it in one of the stake holes in your truck bed and get it up in the air. Of course, the feed line will limit your pit radio physically, but may solve the problem.
I am interested to hear about experiences with different brands of radios that are being used.
Regards,
Mike