52-564: The Adelaide International Raceway (also known as Adelaide International or AIR ) is a permanent circuit owned by Australian Motorsport Club Limited under the auspices of the Bob Jane Corporation. The circuit is located 26 km (16 mi) north of Adelaide in South Australia on Port Wakefield Road at Virginia , and is adjacent to Adelaide's premier car racing Dirt track racing venue, Speedway City . AIR
104-485: A Porsche 935 in the 1982 Australian GT Championship . Circuit owner Bob Jane also holds an AIR track record, co-holding the Sports Sedan lap record with former local driver John Briggs with a time of 54.1 seconds set in 1981. Both drivers set the time in the same race on the same day, with both driving a Chevrolet Monza . Jane's DeKon Monza was built and prepared by Norm Beechey 's former mechanic Pat Purcell while
156-665: A VH Commodore SS on 1 July 1984, this was also the last ATCC race held under the locally developed Group C rules. During the race Peter Brock (who finished second) set the outright touring car lap record. The last ATCC race held at AIR was on 1 May 1988 with Dick Johnson winning the treble. He qualified his Shell sponsored Ford Sierra RS500 on pole, claimed the fastest lap of the race (the Group A lap record), and won from his teammate John Bowe . Races listed in Italics denote that season's ATCC endurance race. The AIR endurance race
208-527: A critical part of success at AIR. Dick Johnson noted during practice for AIR's 1988 ATCC round that after the 60 lap race even the lighter and significantly slower Gemini 's would be suffering with worn tyres. AIR also has an unusual set up for the Pits. While the pit lane is located on the inside of the track coming onto the main straight (cars enter pit lane at the end of the Super Bowl's back straight),
260-413: A local variant of Formula Atlantic already in use since the late 70s, was adopted and proved immediately successful with large numbers of Ralt RT4s imported. But Pacific, or Formula Mondial as it was later re-badged, faded by 1987 and the local Australian Formula 2 category was adopted for a single race in 1987 and for the 1988 season, while a Formula 3000 based formula, later titled Formula Holden
312-556: A ready made track. Compared to the now closed 440 m (480 yd) long Liverpool Speedway in Sydney and the 410 m (450 yd) Tralee Speedway in Canberra , the Super Bowl was a ½ mile (805 metres (880 yd)) track and supremely fast with room on the almost 200m long straights for cars to reach higher speeds, while the Super Bowl's longer than 200m turns are banked slightly at approximately 7°, making cornering faster, with
364-490: A reputation for being hard on tyres, specifically the outside (left hand) tyres which generally took a hammering through the long turn 1, 2 & 3 right hand sweeper and also on the turn 9 bowl. This was due to the longer periods of high speed cornering with the cars and suspensions loaded to the outside. For the longer national championship races, such as the 40 or 60 lap ATCC races and the end of year 125 lap touring car endurance race, this made tyre choice and suspension settings
416-714: A round of the Australian Sports Sedan Championship on 6 occasions between 1976 and 1981. The ASSC was then changed to the Australian GT Championship in 1982 with AIR hosting a round each year until the demise of the AGTC in 1985. AIR played host to a round of the Australian Sports Car Championship on 9 occasions between 1972 and 1988. Adelaide International played host to eleven rounds of
468-542: A shakedown circuit, though this only lasted until 1986. The entire track was resurfaced in early 2008, restricting use even further with a possibility of events being held from later in the year. In the Jan/Feb 2012 edition of Australian Muscle Car Magazine it was reported that Keith Williams, the founder and original owner of the Adelaide International Raceway, had died at the age of 82. AIR
520-522: A showcase for drivers whose driving talent is a valued asset. This new focus aims at making the championship more accessible and competitive by substantially reducing costs thereby allowing financially challenged drivers the opportunity to demonstrate their driving skills. The car chosen to enable this change is the Hyper Racer X1 , designed and manufactured in Australia. The first title in 1957
572-727: A two-litre open formula to replace the Tasman regulations, however with Formula 5000 already having a strong foothold with competitors two-litre fell by the wayside. While F5000 was popular by this stage the Australian Touring Car Championship had surpassed it for popularity, a situation that would continue until today where the Australian Drivers' Championship is now seen as a young driver development category. Formula 5000 continued until 1981, with fields shrunk to less than ten cars at some venues,
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#1732779821127624-476: Is 2.410-kilometre (1.498 mi), the short circuit is 1.770 km (1.100 mi), the Speedway Super Bowl is 0.805 km (0.500 mi), and the drag strip is 0.25 mi (0.40 km) long. The track is dominated by its 920 m (1,010 yd) long main straight which is also the drag strip and the front straight of the Super Bowl. As it is a drag strip, the front straight of the circuit
676-569: Is a motor racing championship contested annually since 1957 by drivers of cars complying with Australia's premier open-wheeler racing category. This category was determined by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport until 2023. From 2024 the championship is contested by drivers of cars complying with Australia's premier open-wheeler racing category as determined by the Australian Auto Sport Alliance . Each year,
728-853: Is also used by the South Australian Police for driver training and car compliance testing. During the years that the Formula One World Championship held the Australian Grand Prix on the Adelaide Street Circuit (1985–1995), AIR was used for driver training for the annual Celebrity Race held as a support event for the Grand Prix. In the early years of the Adelaide AGP, AIR was also used by some Formula One teams as
780-477: Is currently used for Drifting , with the G1 Drift Competition and Drift Supercup holding events at the circuit. Note: In both the 1976 and 1977 Australian Touring Car Championships there were two rounds held at Adelaide International Raceway. The earlier round was a 'sprint' event and later round was a 250 km endurance race. The last Group C ATCC round winner at AIR was Allan Grice driving
832-712: Is owned by the Bob Jane Corporation and run by the Australian Motorsport Club Ltd. Adelaide International Raceway (AIR) was built by Surfers Paradise businessman Keith Williams in 1972. Williams also owned the Mallala Race Circuit and Surfers Paradise International Raceway . Williams owned the track, which remained in an almost 'raw state' until purchased in 1982 by the Bob Jane Corporation. The race track can be used in four different configurations. The full circuit
884-460: Is wider than the rest of the track. Like most Australian circuits at its time of construction, AIR raced and still races clockwise, though the Super Bowl, with speedway meetings and NASCAR races in the 1990s, is the only part of the circuit to run state or national championship races anti-clockwise. Both the Speedway Super Bowl (more commonly referred to as "The Bowl"), and the Drag Strip have
936-468: The 1986 Australian Sports Car Championship . The Veskanda is generally regarded as Australia's fastest ever race car. In the early 1970s, and following the American NASCAR influence which at the time was drawing record crowds, paved short track speedway was becoming popular in Australia (for many years dirt track speedway already had a big following) and with the Speedway Super Bowl, Adelaide
988-686: The Australian Formula 2 Championship between 1972 and 1988. * 1988 was a round of the Australian Drivers' Championship Adelaide International played host to four rounds of the Tasman Series between 1972 and 1975. Adelaide International played host to four rounds of the Rothmans International Series between 1976 and 1979. As of April 2015. Unless otherwise stated all records are for
1040-592: The Maserati 250F finding a few homes in the top echelon of drivers. The rise of Cooper in Europe, led by Jack Brabham , Bruce McLaren and the rest of the Australian/New Zealand invasion that flooded into Formula 1 in the 1960s, saw a trickle down effect increase as the smaller cheaper rear-engined packages proved quickly popular amongst competitors. The competitive nature of the racing as well as
1092-464: The 1980s had been effectively a feeder series for the Australian Touring Car Championship and V8 Supercars Championship , or a launch pad for drivers to start international careers. 2024, under the new stewardship of the AASA, saw an historic change of direction. With the objective of finding the most talented drivers in Australia, the premier open-wheel racing category was re-imagined and now serves as
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#17327798211271144-551: The 1990s, with crowds of up to 15,000 attending the annual Adelaide round of the Australian Championships. The Super Bowl was, and still is the only race circuit still in operation in Australia other than the Calder Park Thunderdome where the race cars can run on a paved oval track, with both tracks currently owned the Bob Jane Corporation. The outright lap record for the Super Bowl of 22.7012
1196-573: The Briggs Monza was built by Adelaide-based K&A Engineering. The lap record for the 1.770 km (1.100 mi), 7 turn Short Circuit is 43.9 seconds, jointly held by Mark Trengrove in a Formula 2 , and local Adelaide Sports Sedan driver Mick Monterosso. To set his lap time, Monterosso drove the Adelaide built (by K&A Engineering) Group A , Group C and IMSA specification Veskanda Chevrolet sports car used by John Bowe to dominate
1248-730: The Humes Guardrail 300, run on 20 November 1983 under CAMS Group C regulations, was won by Peter Brock in his HDT VH Commodore SS . The 1976 and 1977 races were run as part of the Australian Touring Car Championship. Adelaide International played host to seven rounds of the Australian Drivers' Championship between 1972 and 1988. From 1989 the Drivers' Championship (also known as the CAMS Gold Star) moved to Mallala. AIR played host to
1300-466: The Super Bowl behind pit lane. The outright lap record for the full 2.410 km (1.498 mi) circuit is held by Australia's 1980 Formula One World Drivers' Champion Alan Jones at 49.5 seconds. Jones set the record during the 1977 Rothmans International Series driving a Lola T332 - Chevrolet Formula 5000. Jones also holds the GT lap record of the circuit with a time of 51.7 seconds while driving
1352-501: The capacity to run night meetings due to the lights that run around the Super Bowl and down the circuits main straight. The spectator viewing areas extend from the final turn and all the way down the main straight. There are also spectator mounds from turn 3 around to turn 6, and then from the outside of turn 7 (the bowl) and all along the back straight. The proximity of the final turn of the bowl to Port Wakefield Road means that spectator mounds can not be placed there. Starting in 1994 with
1404-429: The cars actually enter the track from the paddock through the pit gate on the outside of the track at the end of turn 9 (the gate is closed and forms part of the outside retaining wall during races). This means that the main paddock for AIR is located on the outside of the main straight behind the officials tower and spectator mounds. This is despite there being an open and unused area of approximately 21,500m located within
1456-522: The establishment of an annual Australian Drag Racing Championship series, with ASID as one of five venues across the country to host a round in the inaugural season. Since its opening in 1972, Adelaide International has been used as a test track for various race teams including the Melbourne-based Holden Dealer Team , as well as Adelaide based manufacturer Holden . Also, due to it being closer to Adelaide than Mallala, AIR
1508-468: The exception of turn 1 for running clockwise on the Bowl which is generally flat - necessary due to the front straight also being the drag strip, the main straight of the road course and the usual exit of pit lane. The turns of the bowl being banked made turn 7 of the full circuit (turn 5 on the short course) slightly off-camber as cars entered the Bowl. The Speedway Super Bowl held winter race meetings and
1560-420: The famous Tasman Series , the Rothmans International Series , as well as other CAMS sanctioned national championships, including the Australian Drivers' Championship , Australian Formula 2 Championship , the Australian Sports Car Championship , Australian Sports Sedan Championship , and the Australian GT Championship . With six of the full circuits nine turns being right handers, those being turn 1, which
1612-548: The fastest times recorded on the Super Bowl would be around 78 mph (126 km/h). To underline the speed difference of AIR compared to the Thunderdome, the terminal speed of the NASCAR's on the shorter AIR straights was around 117 mph (188 km/h) which was some 5 mph (8.0 km/h) slower than the cars were doing on the high banked turns at Calder. With its 920 m (1,010 yd) long front straight, it
Adelaide International Raceway - Misplaced Pages Continue
1664-498: The first ANDRA meeting at the track for over 10 years with he ANDRA Pro Series 1000, which marked the Australian debut (albeit for all classes, not just the nitromethane categories) of 1,000 ft (300 m) drag racing. ANDRA Top Fuel will continue to compete over a quarter-mile (402m) distance, but short tracks such as Adelaide will only be to 1,000 feet. In 2021, Australian National Drag Racing Association announced
1716-489: The infield of the Super Bowl directly behind pit lane, have also been added in recent years. Adelaide International Raceway also raced top level motorbike racing. Series that utilised the circuit included the Swann International Series featuring riders such as Graeme Crosby , who won the 1980 series race, and Gregg Hansford . There was an annual 3-Hour race held at the circuit until the mid-1980s that
1768-550: The late 1980s for some daytime meetings, however crowds were down. In an ironic twist, when Rowley Park ceased operating in April 1979, Adelaide's new speedway venue Speedway Park (now called Speedway City), was opened adjacent to AIR in October 1979, the crowds returned despite the same travel time to get there as for AIR. From 1990, the Super Bowl became a regular and popular short track venue for AUSCAR and NASCAR racing during
1820-591: The long (2.410 km) circuit. The official race lap records at Adelaide International Raceway are listed as: Bob Jane Too Many Requests If you report this error to the Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.226 via cp1108 cp1108, Varnish XID 217984482 Upstream caches: cp1108 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 07:43:41 GMT Australian Drivers%27 Championship The Australian Drivers' Championship
1872-513: The more powerful (with 20+ years of engine, tyre and suspension development) NASCAR and AUSCAR times set during the late 1990s. Indeed, Hughes' qualifying time of 23.8 in 1976 would have placed him 8th on the NASCAR starting grid for the SuperSpeedway Series meeting some 22 years later (the two categories both raced anti-clockwise). Compared to the Thunderdome where the NASCAR's would lap at speeds over 140 mph (230 km/h),
1924-435: The removal of the old stands along the main straight and replacing them with spectator mounds, upgrades have been made through the years in a bid to bring AIR back to being a regularly used national motor racing venue. The old timing tower and VIP facilities were pulled down and replaced with several new buildings and a paved VIP area for corporate sponsors was added. A spectator mound and a small, uncovered grandstand, located on
1976-606: The reputation of antipodean personnel in Europe saw the factory teams look towards racing in Australia/New Zealand during the European winter. This led to the development of the Tasman Series regulations and a flood of Coopers and Brabhams into Australian racing, as well as encouraging the rise of domestic manufacturers like Elfin Sports Cars . As the Tasman series faded there was a considerable push for
2028-539: The season had begun. In 2020 it was decided to revive the Gold Star for the S5000 Australian Drivers' Championship series of V8 open wheelers. The COVID-19 pandemic prevented a championship from being contested in 2020 delaying the title being awarded until May 2021. S5000 racing was placed on indefinite hiatus starting in 2024. In 2024, the Australian Drivers' Championship will be sanctioned by
2080-694: The winner is awarded a Gold Star - from 1957 - 2023 the CAMS Gold Star and from 2024 the AASA Gold Star. The Australian Drivers' Championship is the third oldest continuously awarded title in Australian motorsport, with only the Australian Grand Prix (since 1928) and the Australian Hillclimb Championship having a longer uninterrupted history. While originally intended to be the premier prize for domestic motor racing it had faded in importance over time and from
2132-523: The years, as well as regular off-street racing for road cars. The track then went unused and had seen no drag racing since the late 1990s, with racing making a return in November 2011. This saw Top Doorslammers run the 1/8th mile track for the first time in over 10 years and gives hope for drag racing's future in South Australia. On 13–15 April 2012 top line drag racing made its return to AIR for
Adelaide International Raceway - Misplaced Pages Continue
2184-481: Was South Australia's major motor racing circuit, due to a covenant placed on Mallala preventing any motor sport activities there (the covenant had been done away with by 1982). AIR regularly hosted rounds of the Australian Touring Car Championship and endurance races of the Australian Manufacturers' Championship (later known as the 'Championship of Makes') . The Adelaide track also hosted rounds of
2236-405: Was also the hardest braking point of the track after the fastest cars such as Formula 5000 's regularly reached speeds of over 270 km/h (170 mph) on the long straight (by 1988 the turbocharged Ford Sierra RS500 touring cars run by Dick Johnson Racing were reaching 258 km/h (160 mph)), and the sweeping turns 2 and 3, plus the high speed bowl section, gave Adelaide International
2288-509: Was always intended that Adelaide International Raceway would host top level drag racing, finally giving Adelaide a national venue that could compete with (at the time) Calder Park (Melbourne), Castlereagh ( Sydney ), Ravenswood ( Perth ), and the Keith Williams owned Surfers Paradise Raceway which, like AIR and Calder, incorporated a drag strip into the circuit design. AIR played host to numerous national drag racing championships through
2340-473: Was developed. Formula Holden ran from 1989 to 2003 by which stage this formulae had become unviable, the international death of Formula 3000 causing a supply of chassis to dry up. In 2005 international Formula 3 regulations were adopted. Dwindling grid numbers in Australian Formula 3 saw CAMS elect not to award the Gold Star in 2015 for the first time in its history. This decision was made after
2392-659: Was first run in 1972 as a 250-mile race (397 km) before being shortened to 300 km (187.5 mi) in 1978 and became part of the " Australian Championship of Makes " until 1980 then becoming part of the Australian Endurance Championship . The first endurance race, the Chesterfield 250 , run on 27 August 1972 for Series Production Touring Cars , was won by Colin Bond driving a Holden Dealer Team (HDT) LJ Torana GTR XU-1 . The last enduro,
2444-561: Was first used on 16 June 1974 when a large crowd or around 10,000 turned up to see competitors from Rowley Park Speedway drive on the new asphalt speedway. It quickly became apparent that cars built for the 358 metres (392 yd) dirt track speedway were out of their depth on the ½ mile Super Bowl , with the Modified Rods ( Sprintcars ) reaching over 170 km/h (110 mph) on the straights when they were only used to about 80 km/h (50 mph) on dirt. Sedan driver Jim Curnow
2496-486: Was knocked unconscious when his Holden Torana hit the concrete retaining wall and chronic Understeer was the biggest complaint of almost all drivers with cars generally being set up for dirt and not asphalt. Some sedan drivers then started building cars that were suited to racing on the Super Bowl with a space frame chassis , well tuned V8 engines and wide slick tyres (such as those which were racing successfully at Liverpool) and these cars quickly dominated. The problem
2548-506: Was open in regulation, effectively Formula Libre . While the age of the 'Australian special', handbuilt racecars developed by local mechanic/engineers away from the European/American manufacturers that had dominated pre-World War II racing, was not yet dead, most notably the series of Maybach specials were still competitive as second-hand Formula 1 and Formula 2 cars from Europe became increasingly popular with competitors, with
2600-463: Was set in a NSACAR by Terry Whyhoon driving a Ford Thunderbird during the 1997/98 Goodyear Australian SuperSpeedway Series. The fastest qualifying and race laps set during speedway meetings was set in 1976 by John Hughes (later the founder of World Series Sprintcars ) driving a V8 powered HJ Holden One Tonner ute chassis covered by HJ Monaro bodywork. His times were 23.8 for qualifying and 23.2 seconds race lap, which were not much slower than
2652-519: Was televised nationally on the ABC , but once the covenant was lifted on the Mallala Raceway, safety concerns about the Super Bowl having no runoff area on the outside of the track saw bike racing move to Mallala instead. AIR continues to run bikes in drag racing with Top Bike and Pro Stock Motorcycle both being regulars at drag racing events. From 1972 to 1988 the Adelaide International Raceway
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#17327798211272704-428: Was that there were too few of them with some races only having five or six competitors. Most drivers eventually decided it was more fun racing on the dirt at Rowley Park and with crowd numbers dwindling to around 2,000 due to both the tracks location (26 km (16 mi) north of Adelaide) and the dwindling number of competitors, speedway meetings stopped being held after 1976. Speedway Super Sedans did return to AIR in
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