Ads
related to: japan show car series 5 ebay for sale near me by owner private party
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Japanese Touring Car Championship (2 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Auto racing series in Japan" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
In an agreement between WSC Ltd and Japan TCR Management, the TCR Japan Series began in 2019. The competition takes advantage of the success of the class in the Super Taikyu Series and runs on the same weekends as the Super Formula, the most important single-seater category in Japan. The agreement is valid for the next 6 years, until 2024.
The series had its start from the late 1960s and was dominated by the C10 Skyline GT-Rs until the Mazda Savanna RX-3 ended its dominance of the series. With the emergence of Group 5 cars in the latter half of the 1970s, the series was succeeded in 1979 by the Super Silhouette class, which was held as a support race to the Fuji Grand Champion Series.
Car No. Drivers Class Rounds Ref. Azabu Wako's ED Nilzz NGK Audi RS 3 LMS TCR: 7 Jun Makino 2, 6 [3] BRP Birth Racing Project Audi RS 3 LMS TCR: 17 Kenji Suzuki 2−6 [4] Volkswagen Golf GTI TCR: 19 'Hirobon' 1−2 [3] CUPRA León TCR: 3−6 190 Kengo Ichijo 1 [5] Audi Team Hitotsuyama Audi RS 3 LMS TCR: 21 Takuro Shinohara: All [6] 101 Hideki ...
The Japan Cup Series is a racing series operated by SRO Motorsports Group and Team Asia One GT Management's GT World Challenge Asia, an auto racing series for grand tourer cars in Japan. The races are contested with GT3-spec and GT4-spec cars.
TCR Japan Sunday Series Pos. Driver FUJ ATP SUG MOT1 MOT2 SUZ Pts. 1 'Hirobon' 1 2: 29 2 Masanobu Kato 2 3: 21 3 Mineki Okura 3 4: 17 4 Yuki Fujii 4 1: 17 5 Jun Sato 5 5: 11 6 Akihiko Nakaya 6 8 7 Keiichi Inoue 7 6 8 Naoto Takeda 8 4 9 Masayoshi Oyama 9 2 - Kenji Suzuki Ret - Pos. Driver FUJ ATP SUG MOT1 MOT2 SUZ Pts.
The JGTC (Japanese Grand Touring Championship) [1] was established in 1993 [2] [3] by the Japan Automobile Federation (JAF) via its subsidiary company the GTA (GT Association), replacing the defunct All Japan Sports Prototype Championship for Group C cars and the Japanese Touring Car Championship for Group A touring cars, which instead would adopt the supertouring formula.
A show car, sometimes called a dream car, is a custom-made automobile created specifically for public display, rather than sale. They are shown at auto shows and other exhibitions. Show cars can either come from car companies or from private individuals. Corporate show cars generally fall into one of three categories: