Showing posts with label Super GT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Super GT. Show all posts
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Super GT: A weekend to forget for Audi teams at Okayama
By Tarek Ramchani
Okayama hosted the season opener of the Japanese Super GT series this weekend. As in 2012 the Audi R8 LMS ultra is taking part in the demanding GT300 class. Two Audi teams were present at the event, Hitotsuyama Racing and äpr racing, with some disappointing results in the end.
Both Hitotsuyama Racing and äpr racing are returning to the series with Audi. Hitotsuyama Racing, unlike last season, is entering a single Audi R8 LMS utlra, a brand new 2013 spec car on Hankook rubber. The #21 ZENT car had an extra 40 kg added by the GTA, the series organizers, as the car is not yet homologated by the FIA. The other car from äpr racing was in its 2012 specification, using Yokohama tires. Both teams struggled in the qualifying sessions. Hitotsuyama Racing finished eighteenth in class, even worse for äpr racing with no time at all.
On race day things were not different, both Audi cars were forced to follow behind. In the end the #30 IWASAKI R8 of äpr racing ended fourteenth in the GT300 class with drivers Yuki Iwasaki and Fairuz Fauzy. The #21 ZENT R8 of Hitotsuyama Racing finished in sixteenth, in the hands of Richard Lyons and Akihiro Tsuzuki. The race win went to the #11 GAINER DIXCEL Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3, the same team that gave Audi its first and only GT300 class win in Super GT last year. One thing is clear now, the Audi R8 LMS ultra is severely penalized in Super GT. Since its debut race win last year, at the same Okayama circuit, the car has been facing a very unfair Balance of Performance. The race results of Okayama race are here.
Next stop for Super GT will be at Fuji in three weeks time. We hope that both Audi teams will be allowed to compete fairly.
Photo credit: Hitotsuyama Racing
Saturday, March 2, 2013
2013 Audi R8 LMS ultra of Hitotsuyama Racing testing at Fuji
By Tarek Ramchani
The all conquering Audi R8 LMS ultra has received aerodynamic changes for the 2013 season. Two fully detailed threads about the 2013 R16 can be read here and here.
Hitotsuyama Racing is the first team to unveil their new 2013 Audi R8 LMS ultra. The Japanese Audi Sport customer racing team recently tested their car at the Fuji Speedway. The team is set to return to the Japanese Super GT series, the car will be shared by drivers Akihiro Tsuzuki and Richard Lyons. Last year Hitotsuyama Racing entered two older specification Audi R8 LMS cars in the demanding GT300 class with mixed results all season long.
Our friends from RacerLink were on site and offered great photo coverage of the new Hitotsuyama Racing racer. Their topic about Fuji's tests can be seen here.
Photo credit: RacerLink
Friday, February 15, 2013
First 2013 Audi R8 LMS ultra delivery
By Johan Laubscher
The first 2013 Audi R8 LMS ultra delivery follows shortly on the heels of the first public sighting. On Thursday a new white R8 LMS ultra was spotted in the Netherlands at Schiphol whist in transit, more can be read HERE. Following this sighting in Europe another car, claimed to be the first delivery worldwide, arrived in Japan for Hitotsuyama Racing, on Friday 15 February. The Japanese team have recently put their two older Audi R8 LMS cars up for sale, after making the decision to acquire a new specification Audi R16 for the first time.
They have taken delivery of a brand new white Audi R8 LMS ultra. They published the first photos on their Facebook page late last night followed by Racerlink and QuattroWorld running the first stories, those can be read HERE and HERE respectively. More detailed photos are available via Racerlink.
For now it remains speculation whether these two cars are different or indeed the same car in transit. Inspection of the wood foundation in the packaging suggests that they are not the same car, and that the car spotted in Schiphol may be heading to a customer team else where. So far only the cars in the Netherlands and Japan have been widely seen by the public, but more deliveries are expected to come to light soon.
More information:
Hitotsuyama Racing on Facebook
Racerlink on Facebook
QuattroWorld article
Racerlink article
Photos by Hitotsuyama Racing
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Mixed Fuji Sprint Cup race 1 for Audi teams
By Tarek Ramchani
The Japanese Super GT series is hosting its annual non-championship special event this weekend. The Fuji Sprint Cup at the Fuji Speedway. Unlike the usual endurance format, the Fuji Sprint Cup consists of two separate sprint races. Each car is driven by only one driver for each race of the two races individually. Race 1 was already run today in apocalyptic weather.
Four Audi R8 LMS race cars entered the event. The R16 had a very hard qualifying session for race 1. Richard Lyons was the best ranked in twelfth place, with the #21 ZENT Audi R8 LMS. Katsuyuki Hiranaka was fourteenth in the #11 GAINER DIXCEL R8 LMS. Yuya Sakamoto with the #30 IWASAKI MODA KUROCO apr R8 was seventeenth, while Igor Sushko was twenty third driving the #77 investors Audi R8 LMS.
The race do not have a Le Mans style rolling start, but a standing start. Right after the start Richard Lyons with the #21 Audi was forced to retire after damaging the clutch. Heavy rain made the race very difficult. However the Audi drivers were able to recover and improve. In the end Katsuyuki Hiranaka come home in seventh with the #11 Audi, while a great charge by Igor Sushko in the #77 Audi gave him a ninth place finish, not bad starting from the back of the pack.
Race 2 is set for tomorrow. The Audi cars will again start from behind. Tetsuya Tanaka in the #11 Audi will start from fourteenth, Akihiro Tsuzuk #21 R8 from fifteenth, Yuki Iwasaki #30 car from sixteenth and Kenji Kobayashi #77 machine from twenty first. We wish the best of luck for the three Audi teams and the four drivers.
Photo credit: GTA/Super GT
More information:
Super GT official website
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Joint future for DTM and Japanese Super GT from 2014
DTM Press Release
From 2014, DTM will be heading in a new direction. Thanks to a cooperation deal signed this Tuesday in Tokyo, the most popular international touring-car series is not only open for the Japanese car manufacturers but at the same time, the three premium-car manufacturers involved in DTM, Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz, also will have the opportunity to compete in the Japanese Super GT. The agreement regarding the use of the ‘New DTM’ regulations by Japan’s Super GT begins in 2014 and runs – for the time being – for four years.
“This is a very special day for all those involved but in addition, it also has got outstanding significance for the entire motor racing world. This unique cooperation was made possible by the right parties getting involved at the perfect point in time,” said Hans Werner Aufrecht, Chairman of DTM rights holder and promoter ITR e.V., on the occasion of the signing of the contract with the Japanese Series organiser, GT Association (GTA), in Tokyo.
“This cooperation of GTA and ITR based on the new technical regulations is a dream come true. We believe that this milestone in motor-racing history will not only help to reduce the costs dramatically but at the same time, it also should help improving safety and creating spectacular racing with equal chances for the manufacturers and teams, thus entertaining the millions of fans all over the world.”
“The GTA, ITR and the manufacturers involved are entering virgin soil,” said Audi Motorsport Director Dr Wolfgang Ulrich who represented the DTM manufacturers, in Tokyo. The Super GT in Japan and DTM have got many common ideas – a fact that became evident in the intense discussions we had in recent years. Now, these organisations are going to cooperate on the basis of shared technical regulations. A move that will guarantee maximum safety, spectacular sport and cost-efficient motor racing.”
“The technical regulations of DTM are trend-setting in many ways,” added Christian Schacht, Secretary General of the German Motor Sport Association (DMSB). “Key facts such as the fascinating cars, the high safety standards and the cost efficiency, too, represented the top priorities in the discussions with the Japanese Motor Sport Federation.”
Massaki Banndoh, Chairman of the GTA, also was delighted: “We believe that this agreement will contribute greatly to the development of both the SUPER GT and DTM race series. We also think that deepening the relationship between DTM in Europe and SUPER GT in Asia toward the future may lead to new developments – such as organizing exchange races for both series – that have got what it takes to bring new excitement and pleasure to the fans around the world.
The agreement was created in close cooperation of the German Motor Sport Association (DMSB) and the Japanese Automobile Association (JAF). Thanks to the same technical basis, the DTM manufacturers, Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz, will be able to race against Toyota, Nissan and Honda in the Japanese Super GT, from 2014. Und at the same time, the Japanese manufacturers will have the opportunity to compete in DTM.
To make for equal opportunities for the DTM and Super GT cars that currently are racing with differing engine concepts, the cars will be categorised according to a system called ‘Balance of Performance’ (BOP) for a transitional period.
At the same time, the beginning of this partnership also means an intensification of the successful collaboration of the manufacturers involved – Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz as well as Toyota, Nissan and Honda – the two series organisers, ITR e.V. and GTA, and the associations DMSB and JAF. In the future, joint technical working groups and circles will hold meetings to create the basis for a continuous exchange of information.
Photo credit: ITR/DTM and GTA/Super GT
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)









