Australian Motor Racing Championships

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The Australian Motor Racing Championships is an collection of national motor racing series travelling to a series of circuits across Australia under a single banner. These race meetings represent the banner race meetings for the Australian Auto Sport Alliance how sanction the series through circuits aligned to the AASA.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Beginnings

The series began as a second and third tier collection of national motor racing series in 2005 providing a home for series such as Formula Holden, Formula 3, Sports Sedan, Production Cars, Truck Racing, Saloon Cars, Commodore Cup and Australian Touring Car Challenge. A successful 2005 series was offset by trouble brewing as CAMS who sanctioned the series wanted to de-register series series with dropping numbers, while other series, led mainly by Formula 3 were looking for increased exposure to their series. What resulted was division amongst the AMRS categroeis, the majority of whom left to join the Shannon's Nationals series of categories sanctioned by CAMS while the AMRS itself made the transition to AASA sanctioning.

Without the CAMS categories that filled half of the 2005 program some new categories had to be created, with the intent of capturing categories that had been disenfranchised by CAMS. The series was centred around existing categories[1], the popular Touring Car Challenge was a mixed bag category made up of cars left over from several categories, Group A touring cars not quite old enough the race as a historic category, older V8 Supercars no longer allowed to enter the second tier Fujitsu V8 Supercars Series, and cars from Super Touring and Future Touring categories whose series had died in the early 2000s. Thundersports was made up of a category called Future Racers, championed by Peter Brock and Ross Palmer of PROCAR fame it had never taken off and CAMS had refused to sanction the category as it was broadly very similar to the Aussie Racing Cars class. Several cars had been built and made a natural core for a sports car class and the regulations were opened for several Sports Prototype classes, with European LMP3 and the motorcycle powered Supersports classes targeted although current outright Le Mans cars were theoretically permitted. Formula 4000, the new name for Formula Holden also fronted, with the class expanded to include OzBOSS, a local variation of the European Formula BOSS (Big Open Single Seater), designed to encourage a wide variety of open wheel racing cars.

Production Touring Cars was a variation of the cars eligible for Australian Production Car Championship, although there was an emphasis placed on cars with as few modifications as possible from road specification, something which the APCC no longer represented. 3.3 litre Holdens was a Victorian based variation of the popular entry level HQ Holden category. Unlike HQ Holdens where only the HQ model of Holden Kingswood was permitted, later models HJ, HX and HZ were also permitted. Classic Touring Cars was more or less a direct copy of Group N Historic Touring cars. Super Tin Tops was a touring car type of category intended for slower and less modified cars than those in the Touring Car Challenge, the obvious targets were competitors in Improved Production and Sports Sedans and more limited categories like Saloon Cars and Commodore Cup.

Controversially, Stockcar Thunder Road was included, intending to provide the once popular Australian NASCAR competitors a category to race in, however after much hype and promotion no competitors emerged.

[edit] Continued growth

The pre-existing categories grew promisingly with Touring Car Challenge and Thundersports well supported. Production Touring developed its own group of competitors. OzBoss was slow to take off and was quickly merged into Formula 4000 grids. Similarly Super Tin Tops was slow to gather momentum and some Production Sports Car type vehicles were included and Classic Touring Cars were merged together as well.

Despite this the series 2006 series ended promisingly and most categories continued to grow into the 2007 season. The Inter Marque Championship for production sports cars was a successful addition to the series, bringing large fields. Another addition was the X Challenge series, providing a destination for competitors in the collapsed Lotus Trophy series, a one make series for racers of Lotus Exige and Lotus Elise cars.

[edit] 2008

The series was retagged as the Australian Motor Racing Championships for the 2008 season. However the new season has seen entries drop across the board, a near nationwide trend but the AMRC has been hit harder than the average. Formula Holden has dwindled to less than a handful of cars and OzBoss, which grew promisingly in 2007 has dwindled also. Thundersports is now only contested by the former Future Racers, the faster Sports Prototpyes, typified by the West WR1100 cars have been pushed aside into a new category ProtoSports but because of low numbers has been merged into the OzBoss grids. Inter Marque has left AMRC and the new sports car series, Pirelli Gran Turismo Championship, has been poorly supported. The most recent round[2], held at Calder Park Raceway has seen not a single grid, even after merging two or three together, break out of ten cars. The immediate future for the AMRC will be challenging if it can maintain viability.

[edit] 2008 Calendar

The 2008 calendar for the AMRC is[3]:

Rd. Date Circuit City / State
1 1 - 2 Mar Wakefield Park Goulburn, New South Wales
2 26 - 27 Apr Calder Park Raceway Melbourne, Victoria
3 17 - 18 May Queensland Raceway Ipswich, Queensland
4 14 - 15 Jun Winton Motor Raceway Benalla, Victoria
5 26 - 27 Jun Adelaide International Raceway Adelaide, South Australia
6 30 - 31 Aug Calder Park Raceway Melbourne, Victoria
7 27 - 28 Sep Queensland Raceway Ipswich, Queensland
8 1 - 2 Nov Winton Motor Raceway Benalla, Victoria
9 29 - 30 Nov Wakefield Park Goulburn, New South Wales

[edit] Champions

These are the champions from the AMRS series completed.[4][5]

[edit] Touring Car Challenge

[edit] V8 Giants

[edit] Formula 4000

[edit] OzBoss

[edit] Production Touring Cars

[edit] Thundersports

  • 2006 Paul Quinn (Future Racer)
  • 2007 Tom Drewer (West WR1100)

[edit] Inter Marque Challenge

[edit] Super Tin Tops

[edit] 3.3 Litre Holdens

[edit] References

  1. ^ (2006) Australian Motor Racing Series Official Event Programme June 3-4, 2006 Round 4 Queensland Raceway. Chevron Publishing Group. 
  2. ^ Calder Park Raceway 27/04/2008 2008 Australian Motor Racing Championship - Round 2. Retrieved on 2008-04-27.
  3. ^ AMRC Calendar. Retrieved on 2008-04-26.
  4. ^ Rowley, Grant (2006). The Annual 2006 Australian Motorsport. Grant Mark Media, 158-160. 
  5. ^ Rowley, Grant (2007). The Annual 2007 Australian Motorsport. Grant Mark Media, 116-121. 

[edit] External links