:'''JTCC' redirects here. JTCC can also refer to
John Tyler Community College.
The 'Japanese Touring Car Championship' ''(abbr: JTCC, officially known as All Japan Touring Car Championship, Japanese name: 全日本ツーリングカー選手権)'', is a former
touring car racing series held in
Japan.
History
The series had a history going back to the late 1960s and was widely dominated by the
C10 Skyline GT-Rs until the
Mazda Savanna RX-3 broke its dominance pattern. With by the emergence of
Group 5 cars in the later half of the 1970s, the series was replaced in 1979 by the
Formula Silhouette which was always held as a support race to the
Grand Championship. As the series was incorporated and then later dissolved in 1984 by the
All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, the series saw a revival in 1985 for
Group A cars, like all other championships in other countries, there was three divisions, by the late 1980s division 3 would be a closely fought competitions between
Toyota Supras and
Nissan Skylines, whilst division 2 was mainly
BMW M3s and division 1 was between
Honda Civic and
Toyota Corolla. Their biggest race of the season was the
InterTEC (インターTEC) which took place in
Fuji Speedway.
By 1993, like many other Group A series, the series had ended up becoming a one make affair with just the GT-R only appearing on the top category, followed by the M3s on the other, whereas in Div. 3 only consists of Corollas and Civics. For the following year the series would switch to the
Supertouring formula. By 1997 as the class 2 formula cars became more expensive and complicated and due to heavy competitions from
JGTC, organisers would make change to the rules to suit crowd demands. Rule changes includes increases to body width and exhaust noise decibels, also keeping the front aerodynamic devices basic and in 1998 with the withdrawal of
Nissan Motors due to financial problems and
Honda, to concentrate on its
Formula One program and also realising it would be less expensive for them to race their
NSX in the
Japanese Grand Touring Championship series, leaving
Toyota as the sole factory manufacturer to have cars competing using their
Corona EXIVs and
Chasers. Occasionally, an independently run
Opel Vectra and a pair of
Subaru Impreza wagons did race against the factory Toyotas. In 1999, a new formula using spaceframe cars, now renamed 'Super Silhouette Car Championship' came to nothing and the series was abandoned altogether as by then, the Japan's big three had all got work entries in JGTC to this day, now known as
Super GT.
Championship winners
★ 1985:
Naoki Nagasaka/
Kazuo Mogi, Beaurex
BMW 635CSi
★ 1986:
Aguri Suzuki/
Takao Wada,
NISMO Nissan Skyline RS
★ 1987:
Naoki Nagasaka, Object T
Ford Sierra RS500
★ 1988:
Hisashi Yokoshima, Object T
Ford Sierra RS500
★ 1989:
Masahiro Hasemi/
Toshio Suzuki, Hasemi
Nissan Skyline GTS-R
★ 1990:
Kazuyoshi Hoshino/Toshio Suzuki, NISMO
Nissan Skyline GT-R
★ 1991: Masahiro Hasemi/
Anders Olofsson, Hasemi Nissan Skyline GT-R
★ 1992: Masahiro Hasemi/
Hideo Fukuyama, NISMO Nissan Skyline GT-R
★ 1993:
Masahiko Kageyama, Hoshino Nissan Skyline GT-R
★ 1994:
Masanori Sekiya,
TOM'S Toyota Corona E
★ 1995:
Steve Soper,
Schnitzer BMW 318is
★ 1996:
Naoki Hattori, Mooncraft
Honda Accord
★ 1997:
Osamu Nakako, Mooncraft Honda Accord
★ 1998: Masanori Sekiya, TOM'S
Toyota Chaser
External links
★
Japan Automobile Federation results