Pannónia-Ring

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Pannónia-Ring
LocationOstffyasszonyfa, Hungary
Time zoneCET (UTC+1)
CEST (DST)
Coordinates47°18′15″N 17°02′47″E / 47.30417°N 17.04639°E / 47.30417; 17.04639
Broke ground22 February 1996; 28 years ago (1996-02-22)
Opened1 August 1996; 27 years ago (1996-08-01)
Major eventsCurrent:
Alpe Adria International Motorcycle Championship (2011–2020, 2023–present)
Former:
Sidecar World Championship (2015–2019, 2021–2022)
Austria Formula 3 Cup (2009)
IDM Superbike Championship [de] (1997–1999, 2005)
Full Circuit (1996–present)
Length4.740 km (2.945 miles)
Turns18
Race lap record1:46.707 (Germany Arnold Wagner, Dallara SN01, 2009, Formula Nissan)

The Pannónia-Ring is a motor and racing circuit in Ostffyasszonyfa, Hungary. It is located south of the town centre, accessible by road on the 8451.

Data about the track[edit]

  • Track length: 4.740 km (2.945 mi)
  • Number of right turns: 11
  • Number of left turns: 7
  • Track width: 11–13 m (12–14 yd)
  • Length of start-finish straight: 700 m (770 yd)
  • Max speed Pro-Superbike: approx. 260 km/h (160 mph)
  • High-line tumbling zones (gravel)

One of the world's safest motorcycle and car speedway circuits. Dive zones up to 50–150 m (55–164 yd), with even longer slip-outs due to the environmental conditions. The track also has a special feature: it is homologated in the opposite direction (left-hand side).

Formula 3000 test on the Pannónia-Ring in 2000

Homologation to international standards, state-of-the-art infrastructure: health station, electronic timing, petrol station, express service, tyre service, motorbike showroom, restaurant, 300 sqm main building, go-kart and supermoto track, helipad, motel, sanitary, restaurant. The pit lane has 20 boxes and the depot has 15 more.

Lap records[edit]

As of June 2023, the fastest official race lap records at the Pannónia-Ring are listed as:

Category Time Driver Vehicle Event
Full Circuit: 4.740 km (1996–present)
Formula Nissan 1:46.707[1] Arnold Wagner Dallara SN01 2009 Pannónia-Ring Austria F3 Cup round
Formula Renault 2.0 1:47.118[1] Chanoch Nissany Tatuus FR2000 2009 Pannónia-Ring Austria F3 Cup round
Formula Three 1:47.154[1] Nikolas Kvasai Dallara F304[2] 2009 Pannónia-Ring Austria F3 Cup round
Superbike 1:52.294[3] Milan Pawelec BMW S1000RR 2023 Pannónia-Ring Alpe Adria Superbike round
Supersport 1:54.013[4] Görbe Soma [hu] Yamaha YZF-R6 2023 Pannónia-Ring Alpe Adria Supersport round
Porsche Carrera Cup 1:55.367[5] Patrick Eisemann Porsche 911 (991 I) GT3 Cup 2015 Pannónia-Ring Porsche GT3 Challenge Cup Central Europe round
Supersport 300 2:04.137[6] Máté Számadó Kawasaki Ninja 400 2023 Pannónia-Ring Alpe Adria Supersport 300 round

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Interserie / F3 - 04./05.09.2009 - Pannonia Ring Vorläufiges Ergebnis 2. Rennlauf" (PDF). 5 September 2009. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  2. ^ "Nikolas Kvasai - Driver Database". Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  3. ^ "2023 Alpe Adria European Championship - Round 2 - Pannónia-Ring - 16–18 June 2023 - SBK/STK1000 - Race 2" (PDF). 18 June 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  4. ^ "2023 Alpe Adria European Championship - Round 2 - Pannónia-Ring - 16–18 June 2023 - SST600/CUP600/SSP600/MOTO2 - Race 1" (PDF). 17 June 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  5. ^ "eset V4 Tourenwagen Meisterschaft Ungarn, Tschechien, Polen und Slowakei 2015 - Pannoniaring Ungarische Meisterschaft - 1.-2.8.2015 - Porsche GT3 Cup, Rennen 2, 12 Runden". 2 August 2015. Retrieved 19 May 2024.
  6. ^ "2023 Alpe Adria European Championship - Round 2 - Pannónia-Ring - 16–18 June 2023 - SSP300 - Race 2" (PDF). 18 June 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2024.