1992 Tooheys 1000 - Biblioteka.sk

Upozornenie: Prezeranie týchto stránok je určené len pre návštevníkov nad 18 rokov!
Zásady ochrany osobných údajov.
Používaním tohto webu súhlasíte s uchovávaním cookies, ktoré slúžia na poskytovanie služieb, nastavenie reklám a analýzu návštevnosti. OK, súhlasím


Panta Rhei Doprava Zadarmo
...
...


A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | CH | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9

1992 Tooheys 1000
 ...

Layout of the Mount Panorama Circuit

The 1992 Tooheys 1000 was the 33rd running of the Bathurst 1000 touring car race. It was held on 4 October 1992, at the Mount Panorama Circuit just outside Bathurst. The race was held for cars eligible for International Group A touring car regulations and a class available for those who had built cars eligible to the new for 1993 class, CAMS Group 3A touring car regulations.

The winning Skaife/Richards Nissan GT-R

The race was won for the second year in a row by Jim Richards and Mark Skaife driving a Gibson Motor Sport prepared Nissan Skyline GT-R, the pair becoming the first back-to-back Bathurst winners since Peter Brock and Larry Perkins won in 1983 and 1984. Richards and Skaife had to be declared the winners after a rainstorm swept across the race in the closing stages, causing many accidents in conditions deemed by race officials too dangerous to continue. The race results were issued as at the end of the 143rd lap, 18 laps short of full race distance. This was the second time in the event's history where the race was stopped and results declared before the scheduled laps were completed (the previous occasion was in 1981).

The Dick Johnson Racing run Ford Sierra of Dick Johnson and John Bowe was classified in second position with Richards and Skaife's teammates Anders Olofsson and Neil Crompton in third. Former Formula One World Champion Denny Hulme suffered a heart attack at the wheel; he came to a halt at the side of the track and was pronounced dead at the hospital where he was taken.

Class structure and entry list

Class structure

Class A

For Group A cars of over 1600cc engine capacity.
It featured 10 Ford Sierras, 1 Nissan Skyline HR31 GTS-R, 3 Nissan Skyline R32 GT-Rs, 1 Toyota Supra (A70), 11 Holden VL Commodores, 4 Holden VN Commodores, 3 BMW M3 (E30)s, 1 BMW M3s and 1 BMW 635CSi.

Class B

For Group A cars of under 1600cc engine capacity.
It was composed exclusively of 10 Toyota Corollas; 6 Toyota Corolla (E80)s and 4 Toyota Corolla (E90)s.

Class C

A class for the new V8 touring car class that would take over Australian touring car racing in 1993 that would later become known as V8 Supercar.
It was composed of 3 Holden VP Commodores and 1 Ford EB Falcon.

Entry list

47 cars were entered in the race.

No. Class Drivers Team (Sponsor) Car No. Class Drivers Team (Sponsor) Car
1 A New Zealand Jim Richards
Australia Mark Skaife
Gibson Motorsport
(Winfield)
Nissan Skyline R32 30 C Australia Glenn Seton
Australia Alan Jones
Glenn Seton Racing
(Peter Jackson)
Ford Falcon EB
2 A Sweden Anders Olofsson
Australia Neil Crompton
Gibson Motorsport
(Winfield)
Nissan Skyline R32 31 A New Zealand Robbie Ker
Australia Don Watson
Car-Trek Racing
(Tic Tac)
Holden Commodore VL
3 A Australia Trevor Ashby
Australia Steve Reed
Lansvale Smash Repairs
(Dulux ICI Autocolor)
Holden Commodore VN 34 A Australia Ray Gulson
Australia Graham Gulson
New Zealand Peter Beck
Gulson Racing
(NEC)
BMW 635 (E24)
4 A Australia Mark Gibbs
Australia Rohan Onslow
Bob Forbes Racing
(GIO Insurance)
Nissan Skyline R32 35 A Australia Wayne Park
Australia David Parsons
Glenn Seton Racing
(Peter Jackson)
Ford Sierra RS500
05 C Australia Peter Brock
Germany Manuel Reuter
Advantage Racing
(Mobil 1)
Holden Commodore VP 36 A Australia Ken Mathews
Australia Rod Jones
United Kingdom Mike Newton
Rod Jones Racing
(DVST)
Ford Sierra RS500
6 A Australia Alf Grant
Australia Tim Grant
Alf Grant Racing
(Sizzler)
Nissan Skyline R31 37 A Australia John Bourke
Australia Keith Carling
Roger Alexander Racing
(Cessnock Toyota)
Toyota Supra (A70)
7 A Australia Peter Hopwood
Australia Terry Bosnjak
Colin Bond Racing
(Caltex CXT)
Ford Sierra RS500 39 A Australia Bill O'Brien
Australia Barry Graham
Australia Brian Callaghan, Jr.
O'Brien Motorsport
(Everlast Automotive)
Holden Commodore VL
8 A Australia Colin Bond
Australia John Smith
Colin Bond Racing
(Caltex CXT)
Ford Sierra RS500 40 A Australia Garry Willmington
Australia Tom Watkinson
Leeson Racing
(Hugo Boss, Willmington Performance)
Holden Commodore VL
9 A Australia Charlie O'Brien
Australia Gary Brabham
Allan Moffat Racing
(Cenovis)
Ford Sierra RS500 41 A Australia Andrew Harris
Australia Gary Cooke
Daily Planet Racing
(Daily Planet)
Holden Commodore VL
10 A Germany Klaus Niedzwiedz
Australia Gregg Hansford
Allan Moffat Racing
(Cenovis)
Ford Sierra RS500 42 A Australia Graham Moore
Australia Wayne Gardner
Bob Forbes Racing
(Strathfield Car Radios)
Holden Commodore VN
11 A Australia Larry Perkins
Australia Steve Harrington
Perkins Engineering
(Bob Jane T-Marts)
Holden Commodore VL 44 A Australia Stuart McColl
Australia Peter Gazzard
Stuart McColl Motorsport
(Channel 9 Adelaide, Kart Mania)
Holden Commodore VL
13 A Australia Bob Jones
New Zealand Peter Janson
Bob Jones Racing
(Ampol Max 3)
Holden Commodore VL 50 A Australia Bryan Sala
Australia Kevin Weeks
Sala Racing
(Queensland Plastics)
Ford Sierra RS500
14 A Australia Warren Jonsson
Australia Des Wall
Jonsson Racing
(Jonsson Racing)
Holden Commodore VL 52 A Australia Peter Doulman
Australia John Cotter
Doulman Automotive
(Impala Kitchens)
BMW M3 (E30)
15 C Australia Tomas Mezera
Australia Brad Jones
Holden Racing Team
(Castrol, Telecom MobileNet)
Holden Commodore VP 55 A Australia Andrew Miedecke
Australia Troy Dunstan
Advantage Racing
(Mobil 1)
Holden Commodore VN
16 C United Kingdom Win Percy
Australia Allan Grice
Holden Racing Team
(Castrol, Telecom MobileNet)
Holden Commodore VP 70 B Australia Neal Bates
Australia Rick Bates
Toyota Team Australia
(Enzed)
Toyota Corolla (E90)
17 A Australia Dick Johnson
Australia John Bowe
Dick Johnson Racing
(Shell)
Ford Sierra RS500 71 B Australia Jason Bargwanna
Australia Scott Bargwanna
Toyota Team Australia
(Mercantile Mutual)
Toyota Corolla (E90)
18 A Australia Terry Shiel
Australia Greg Crick
Australia Cameron McConville
Dick Johnson Racing
(Shell)
Ford Sierra RS500 72 B Australia Gregg Easton
Australia Brad Stratton
Australia David Sala
Adrian Brooke Racing
(Apex Electrical Contractors)
Toyota Corolla (E80)
20 A New Zealand Denny Hulme
Australia Paul Morris
LoGaMo Racing
(Benson and Hedges)
BMW M3 (E30) 73 B Australia Bob Holden
Australia Dennis Rogers
Australia Garry Jones
Bob Holden Motors
(INJEC)
Toyota Corolla (E80)
22 A Australia John Trimble
Australia Rohan Cooke
Daily Planet Racing
(Daily Planet)
Holden Commodore VL 74 B Australia Peter Verheyen
Australia Geoff Full
Peter Verheyen Racing
(Carrera Sunglasses)
Toyota Corolla (E80)
25 A Australia Tony Longhurst
Venezuela Johnny Cecotto
LoGaMo Racing
(Benson and Hedges)
BMW M3 (E30) 75 B Australia Frank Binding
Australia Bob Tindal
Binding Smash Repairs
(Binding Smash Repairs)
Toyota Corolla (E90)
26 A Australia Daryl Hendrick
Australia John Blanchard
Daryl Hendrick Motorsport
(Gemspares)
Holden Commodore VL 76 B Australia Mike Conway
Australia Calvin Gardiner
Australia Geoff Forshaw
Mountain Motorsport
(Hamilton Island Tourism)
Toyota Corolla (E80)
27 A Australia Terry Finnigan
Australia Garry Rogers
Terry Finnigan Racing Team
(Foodtown Supermarkets)
Holden Commodore VN 77 B Australia Malcolm Rea
Australia Ken Talbert
Australia Richard Wilson
Malcolm Rea Racing
(Motorama, Talken Security)
Toyota Corolla (E80)
28 A Australia Kevin Waldock
Australia Brett Peters
Playscape Racing
(Ampol, AGFA Film)
Ford Sierra RS500 78 B Australia Ted Dunford
Australia Brad Wright
Bob Holden Motors
(Atari, Lynx)
Toyota Corolla (E80)
29 A Australia John English
New Zealand Ed Lamont
Wayne Douglass Racing
(Marathon Foods, Dru-Truss)
Holden Commodore VL 82 B Australia Stuart Murphy
Australia Chris Barns
Stuart Murphy Motorsport
(Laurie Stevens Panelbeaters)
Toyota Corolla (E90)
Source:[1]
Icon Class
A Class A
B Class B
C Class C

Race

"I'm just really stunned for words, I can't believe the reception. I thought Australian race fans had a lot more to go than this, this is bloody disgraceful. I'll keep racing but I tell you what, this is going to remain with me for a long time. You're a pack of arseholes."

Jim Richards' infamous post race comment.[2]

Nine time Bathurst winner Peter Brock had his worst ever start to the race when the tailshaft of his new VP Commodore broke on the starting line. After sitting on the side of the circuit for a number of laps, the car was eventually towed into the pits where the Mobil 1 crew fitted a new tailshaft while Brock explained to the television audience that it was a brand new tail shaft fitted that morning that had broken. Brock, whose co-driver was German DTM driver and winner of the 1989 24 Hours of Le Mans, Manuel Reuter, rejoined the race on lap 15 in last position. After later breaking a second tailshaft and being pushed into a spin at Forrest's Elbow during the first rain storm by the Holden Racing Team Commodore of Allan Grice which forced Brock to pit when Grice pushed past and ground the front spoiler off of the Mobil 1 Commodore (causing Brock to vent on television about Grice's driving in a rare show of emotion), Brock and Reuter finished in 27th place.

This race was notable for the winning car being crashed and undrivable at the race's conclusion. Due to heavy rain a large number of crashes occurred towards the end of the race leading to the race being stopped during the leader's 145th lap, requiring a windback to the completed 144th lap. However, many cars had crashed prior to the leader's completion of the 144th lap so the race was woundback an additional lap to allow them to be placed. Due to this windback, Richards' car which had hit the wall once suffering extensive damage—drivable but barely so—and had then slid off the track to join several other cars that had crashed about 200 metres past Forrest's Elbow onto Conrod Straight, was the winner since it was the lead car. Due to high concentrations of Ford and Holden fans and spectators generally upset that a crashed car had won race winner Jim Richards, who drove a Nissan, was vociferously booed as he took the podium. Distressed over the death his friend Denny Hulme which he was only informed about moments before he took to the podium (see below), as well as the crowd's reaction,[3] in his very brief, international live feed broadcast victory speech he told the spectators, "You're a pack of arseholes." (see right for full comment) Richards later apologised for his comments. Richards and Skaife's teammate Neil Crompton (driving alongside Anders Olofsson in the #2 Winfield Nissan) would also express similar disappointment to the crowd's behaviour, giving them the middle finger as he walked off the podium

The race was also the last in which turbo powered cars such as the Nissan Skyline and Ford Sierra would be permitted to compete. As of 1 January 1993 the turbos were banned in favor of the previously mentioned V8 formula which would later evolve into V8 Supercars.

1992 was also significant in that it saw the return of the Ford Falcon to Bathurst for the first time since the end of the Group C era in 1984. Glenn Seton and new team recruit Alan Jones qualified their 1993 V8 spec Ford EB Falcon in 4th place, the fastest of the 1993 cars (all 4 of which qualified in the Top 10). While the new Falcon V8 performed above even Seton's expectations, unfortunately their race ended on lap 84 with fuel pump failure. The other three 1993 spec cars were the Holden VP Commodore's from the Holden Racing Team and Peter Brock's example.

Australia's 1987 500cc Grand Prix World Champion Wayne Gardner made his touring car racing debut in the race partnering Sydney veteran Graham Moore in Moore's Holden VN Commodore SS Group A SV. Moore qualified the car in 21st position and they eventually finished in 26th place. Gardner's first ever race drive came while rain lashed the circuit. Gardner's presence in the race saw two former Grand Prix motorcycle racing World Champions driving in the race. Johnny Cecotto, who had won World Championships in 1975 and 1978, co-drove with Tony Longhurst in a BMW M3 Evolution. Cecotto almost didn't get to drive in the race after he crashed the car at Forrest's Elbow in the race morning warm up session, though the TAFE crash repair crew were able to repair the car for the start. Longhurst and Cecotto would finish in fourth place.

The 1992 Tooheys 1000 was also a sad occasion as popular veteran driver and 1967 Formula One world champion Denny Hulme, 56 years old from New Zealand and that country's only World Drivers' Champion, died of a heart attack suffered during lap 33. Hulme, driving the second Benson & Hedges Racing BMW M3 with young driver Paul Morris, started the race in 18th position. On lap 33 when the race was under heavy rain, Hulme radioed into his team while coming through Forrest's Elbow that he could not see. Coming down Conrod Straight, the yellow #20 BMW went off the track and glanced the wall on the left hand side before continuing across the track to the outside wall where the car came to a stop, Channel 7 cameras capturing the incident. Most concern was with the driver. While the race continued under the safety car, Hulme was removed from the car and taken by ambulance to nearby Bathurst Hospital where he was later pronounced dead from heart failure. According to unconfirmed reports, Hulme was still alive, though unconscious, when track marshals reached the BMW a few seconds after it came to a stop just before the right hand kink into Caltex Chase.

Tooheys Top 10

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=1992_Tooheys_1000
Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok. Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.






Text je dostupný za podmienok Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License 3.0 Unported; prípadne za ďalších podmienok.
Podrobnejšie informácie nájdete na stránke Podmienky použitia.

Your browser doesn’t support the object tag.

www.astronomia.sk | www.biologia.sk | www.botanika.sk | www.dejiny.sk | www.economy.sk | www.elektrotechnika.sk | www.estetika.sk | www.farmakologia.sk | www.filozofia.sk | Fyzika | www.futurologia.sk | www.genetika.sk | www.chemia.sk | www.lingvistika.sk | www.politologia.sk | www.psychologia.sk | www.sexuologia.sk | www.sociologia.sk | www.veda.sk I www.zoologia.sk


Pos No Team Driver Car TT10 Qual
Pole 17 Shell Ultra-High Racing Australia Dick Johnson Ford Sierra RS500 2:12.898 2:14.56
2 11 Bob Jane T-Marts Perkins Racing Australia Larry Perkins Holden VL Commodore SS Group A SV 2:14.431 2:14.08
3 1 Winfield Team Nissan Australia Mark Skaife Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R 2:14.546 2:13.82
4 30 Peter Jackson Racing Australia Glenn Seton Ford EB Falcon 2:14.971 2:15.53
5 15 Holden Racing Team Australia Tomas Mezera Holden VP Commodore 2:16.028 2:15.74
6 4 GIO Racing Australia Mark Gibbs Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R 2:16.168 2:15.75
7 16 Holden Racing Team Australia Allan Grice Holden VP Commodore 2:16.215 2:16.13
8 05 Mobil 1 Racing Australia Peter Brock Holden VP Commodore 2:16.459 2:15.98
9