User:Donnie Park/IFMAR World Championship – 1:10 Electric Touring Car

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IFMAR ISTC World Championship
First race1998
Duration3 rounds of 5 minute heats
Most wins (driver)Marc Rheinard (3)
Most wins (manufacturer)Tamiya (5)
Circuit information
SurfaceAsphalt

The IFMAR World Championship for 1:10 scale electric powered touring cars cars (officially "IFMAR ISTC World Championship"), is a world championship radio controlled car race hosted by IFMAR. It takes place biennially on even years since 2000, after a provisional World Cup race in 1998. Since then it became part of the IFMAR Electric On-road World Championships following the 1:12 on-road round since it began in 1998.

The event is open exclusively to 1:10 scale electric touring cars, widely known as International Scale Touring Car‎ (ISTC), characterized by its resemblance to road saloon cars found in touring car racing and its overall width cannot be more than 200mm wide but 190mm is widely used.

The chassis is based on its off-road counterpart, except with shorter travel suspension, different battery and motor layout, narrower and taller wheels and rubber tires to its now defunct PRO 10 counterpart.

Tamiya, who is credited for inventing the class in 1991, holds distinction for the most wins for manufacturers; its driver, Marc Rheinard of Germany, hold the record with three wins.[1]

Schedule[edit]

Like the other 1:10 world championships, a maximum of 150 drivers take part, each continental blocs allocated 32 entries each, the host bloc an extra 10 and the final 10 allocated by IFMAR themselves.

The event follows the 1:12 Electric event, beginning on Friday with timed practice on day one, four qualifying heats on day two and for day three; two final qualifying sessions and race day over two heats. After each qualifying session, the best qualifier of the round is awarded zero points, 2 and 3 points for the 2nd and 3rd fastest qualifier and so on with the most points given to the slowest qualifier, driver who do not score a time or is disqualified is thus awarded 500 points. Of six rounds or five in some circumstances that force a round be cancelled, the best three performances counts toward the driver's overall performance, two best rounds counts toward three or four rounds completed and one round count toward two or one rounds. After all the points is totalled up, the driver with the least points is the best qualifier, thus is awarded a TQ (Top Qualifier) award, enabling them to start in front of the first round.[2]

The groups are then split into ten groups of ten drivers in alphabets, pending on their performance in qualifying with A being the fastest of the groups[3] [2]

Race day starts with the slowest groups first, working its way to the next faster groups up to the fastest, the A-main, then progresses to the 2nd heat.[1]Cite error: The opening <ref> tag is malformed or has a bad name (see the help page).. Each race run for a total of eight minutes with an extra 30 seconds to allow the driver to round their laps up[3].

Only the A-main, the group that carries the only hope of taking the world championship title, have three heats with only two best performances that counts and a final practice in the afternoon during race day.[4]

History[edit]

In response to its rising popularity, the class gained recognition by IFMAR in 1996 as a demonstration race with the F1 class as a Manufacturer's Showcase event supporting the 1:12 scale and 1:10 scale pan car world championships,[5] then was introduced in 1998 as a non-championship World Cup race to support the world championships. Briton David Spashett completed a hat-trick of his two championship titles in his home country by winning the touring car class with a Losi Street Weapon, which was a modified version of the XX-4 buggy.[5][1]

Following the positive response to the World Cup race, the three voting blocs (EFRA, ROAR and FEMCA) unanimously voted to include the class[6] as part of the official world championship round in 2000 between the 1:12 and PRO 10 events, won by Atsushi Hara.[1]

Since the demise of the PRO 10 class afterward, the ISTC class have always followed the 1:12 class, running at weekends.

When Surikarn Chaidejsuriya, who was unknown even in his native Thailand, won the 2002 Worlds with a Tamiya his victory was seen as a major achievement for the brand as it helped to elevate them into a serious championship contender internationally and raised their market importance also in Asia.[7]

IFMAR World Championship Winners[edit]

Year Bloc Name Car Motor ESP Transmitter Host Club Venue Location Nation Surface Source Report
1998 EFRA United Kingdom David Spashett Losi Street Weapon Trinity LRP Quantum KO Propo Temple Park Leisure Centre South Shields, Newcastle upon Tyne  United Kingdom Carpet Report
2000 FEMCA Japan Atsushi Hara Yokomo MR4-TC Pro Reedy Fury GM V-12W KO Propo EX-1 Mars Yatabe Arena Tsukuba, Ibaraki  Japan Asphalt [8] Report
2002 FAMAR Thailand Surikarn Chaidejsuriya Tamiya TRF414M Reedy KR Futaba MC800 Futaba Keywest Model Racers Keywest Centre On-Road Circuit Krugersdorp, Gauteng  South Africa Asphalt Report
2004 ROAR Germany Marc Rheinard Tamiya TRF415 Orion Revolution V2 Hara Twister Sanwa M8 Full Throttle Speedway Kissimmee, Florida  United States Asphalt [9] Report
2006 EFRA United Kingdom Andy Moore Hot Bodies Cyclone Hara Edition Orion Hara Twister 2.2 KO Propo Esprit III Universe AS Pole Position AF Model Rings[10] Collegno  Italy Asphalt [11] Report
2008 FEMCA Germany Marc Rheinard Tamiya TRF416WE Speed Passion Competition V2.0 LRP SXX TC-spec Sanwa M11 Radio Control Speedway Radio Control Speedway Bangkok  Thailand Asphalt [12] Report
2010 EFRA[13] Germany Marc Rheinard Tamiya TRF416X Speed Passion Competition V2.0 Speed Passion GT2.0 Pro Sanwa M11X MAC Burgdorf MAC Burgdorf Burgdorf, Hanover  Germany Asphalt [14] Report
2012 EFRA Netherlands Jilles Groskamp Tamiya TRF417WX Orion Vortex Orion Vortex R10 Pro Sanwa EXZES-X Model Auto Club Heemstede MACH Circuit Haarlem  Netherlands Asphalt [15] Report
2014 ROAR Japan Naoto Matsukura Yokomo BD7 2015 Yokomo Yokomo Sanwa M12 Full Throttle Raceway Kissimmee, Florida  United States Asphalt [16] Report
2016 FEMCA Germany Ronald Völker [de] Yokomo BD8 LRP X20 LRP Flow Sanwa M12S 2016 IFMAR World Championships Organizing Committee Beijing Fengtai Model Auto Training Center [zh] Fengtai, Beijing  China Asphalt [17] Report
2018 FAMAR Welkom R/C Club Welkom, Free State  South Africa
Source:[1]

Statistics[edit]

Most Wins[edit]

Drivers[edit]

Rank Driver Wins
1 Germany Marc Rheinard 3
2 Japan Atsushi Hara 1
Thailand Surikarn Chaidejsuriya
United Kingdom Andy Moore
Netherlands Jilles Groskamp
Japan Naoto Matsukura
Germany

Car manufacturers[edit]

Rank Manufacturer Wins
1 Japan Tamiya 5
2 Japan Yokomo 3
3 United States Hot Bodies 1

Motors[edit]

Rank Manufacturer Wins
1 Switzerland Orion 3
2 United States Reedy 2
Hong Kong Speed Passion
4 Japan Yokomo 1
GermanyLRP electronic

Transmitters[edit]

Rank Manufacturer Wins
1 Japan Sanwa 6
2 Japan KO Propo 2
3 Japan Futaba 1

By Member Blocs (Drivers)[edit]

Rank Bloc Wins
1 EFRA 6
2 FEMCA 2
3 ROAR 0
FAMAR

Win(s) by Nations (Drivers)[edit]

Rank Nation Wins
1  Germany 4
2  Japan 2
3  Thailand 1
 United Kingdom
 Netherlands

Most represented in final[edit]

Note: No manufacturers have taken over 5 of 10 of the finals spot, the most have ever been is four. Italics on year represents in which a driver of the country or car manufacturer who failed to score a championship title, italics on nationalities indicate host nation.

Nations (drivers)[edit]

Rank Total Nation Year
1 5  Japan 2000

Car manufacturers[edit]

Rank Total Nation Year
1 4 Japan Tamiya 2010
Japan Yokomo 2014
Japan Tamiya 2014

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Waldron 2014.
  2. ^ a b Gomez 2015, 1.5.0.
  3. ^ a b http://www.ifmar.org/pdf/rules/ifmar_wc_electric_track_2014.pdf
  4. ^ Gomez 2015, 1.7.0.
  5. ^ a b Gonzalez 1996, p. 88.
  6. ^ "ifmar". Archived from the original on 2 March 1999. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  7. ^ Spinner 2008, p. 62.
  8. ^ "1/10 Touring". 2001-03-04. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
  9. ^ Troyon, Lionel. "Masami Hirosaka (1/12) et Marc Rheinard (Touring) CHAMPIONS DU MONDE 2004!". RC Infos. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  10. ^ http://www.petitrc.com/setup/jconcepts/setupbj4/BJ4WE_RyanCavalieri_IFMARWorldsSetup.pdf
  11. ^ Troyon, Lionel. "Andy Moore - 1/10 Touring World Champion!". RC Infos. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  12. ^ "Rheinard back on top of the World". Red RC. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
  13. ^ http://www.dmc-online.com/wm/images/Seiteninhalt/stagereport1v3_08042010.pdf
  14. ^ "Matsuzaki & Harper join Rheinard on World Championship podium". Red RC. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
  15. ^ "Groskamp is World Champion". Events. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
  16. ^ "Matsukura is Touring Car World Champion". Red RC. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
  17. ^ Waldron, Aaron. "WORLDS: Volker is IFMAR ISTC World Champion". LiveRC.com. Retrieved 2016-08-27.

Works cited[edit]


External links[edit]