Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sandown Raceway has hosted the most events, with 51, while Wanneroo Raceway, Perth has hosted the most individual races, with 94. 82 different drivers have won an ATCC/Supercars championship race. Jamie Whincup has won the most championship races, with 124 victories.
Surfers Paradise ATCC round: 3.219 km (2.000 mi) 1969, 1971–1977, 1979–1987 17 Surfers Paradise Street Circuit † Surfers Paradise, Queensland: V8 Supercar Challenge Gold Coast 500: 2.960 km (1.839 mi) 2002–2019, 2022–2024 21 Sydney Motorsport Park † (Eastern Creek Raceway) Eastern Creek, New South Wales: Sydney SuperNight: 3.930 km ...
The Improved Touring Car regulations which governed the ATCC, known at the time as Group C were amalgamated with the more basic Group E Series Production Touring Cars regulations which governed the Bathurst touring car endurance race in a compromise between the two, creating a single class for touring car racing that would hold sway of ...
The 2024 Bathurst 1000 (commercially titled the 2024 Repco Bathurst 1000) was a motor racing event for Supercars held on the week of 10 to 13 October 2024. It hosted the tenth round of the 2024 Supercars Championship and took place at Mount Panorama-Wahluu in Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia, featuring a single race of 1000 kilometres.
The ATCC had expanded to 11 rounds in 1976 and 1977, but the 'Golden Era' often had a thin veneer as uncompetitive small engined cars bolstered entries for many years. The low point saw just nine cars competing for the opening round at Symmons Plains in 1980 , though this could be attributed to new CAMS engine emission rules which effectively ...
The championship began at Symmons Plains on 29 February and ended at Phillip Island on 28 November in the longest season in the history of the series. 1976 saw a substantial change to the ATCC calendar which was expanded to eleven rounds, incorporating the end-of-season long distance Australian Championship of Makes races for the first time.
The 1965 Australian Touring Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing title open to Group C Improved Production Touring Cars. [1] It was contested over a single 40-lap race staged at Sandown Raceway in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia on 11 April 1965.
Class No. Driver Entrant Car Laps Time/Retired 1 Over 3000cc 1 Ian Geoghegan: The Mustang Team Ford Mustang: 34 59:06.8 2 1101–1500cc 26 Darrell King D. King Morris Cooper S: 34 +1:31.0 3 1501–2000cc 19 Alan Hamilton Porsche Distributors (Aust./N.Z.) Pty Ltd Porsche 911: 34 +2:07.0 4 Over 3000cc 2 Fred Gibson: N.E. Allen Competition Pty Ltd ...