Veranstaltergemeinschaft Langstreckenpokal Nürburgring

"VLN" redirects here. For nucleus of the thalamus, see Ventral lateral nucleus. For the school, see Vancouver Learning Network.
Veranstaltergemeinschaft Langstreckenpokal Nürburgring
Official website www.vln.de

The VLN, properly the Veranstaltergemeinschaft Langstreckenpokal Nürburgring (Association of Nürburgring Endurance Cup Organisers) is an organisation of motorsport clubs of which each hosts one event of a ten-race series held on the Nürburgring Nordschleife, the "VLN Langstreckenmeisterschaft Nürburgring" (VLN Endurance Racing Championship Nürburgring). The series was named "BFGoodrich Langstreckenmeisterschaft (BFGLM)" from 2001 to 2009.

Participants of VLN races range from amateurs in small road legal cars with rollcages and harnesses to professional factory teams racing Group GT3 cars. The VLN series is closely associated with the 24 Hours Nürburgring, as it has similar rules (mostly), and mainly the same participants. In the calendar, several weeks around the 24h date in May/June are taken off to allow teams to prepare for the 24h, and to fix their cars afterwards. The 24h is not part of the championship anymore, though.

Touring cars passing in front of the Nürburg
Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 on the 'Ring

History

The VLN was founded in 1977 by several motorsport clubs, which are members of ADAC or Deutscher Motorsport Verband (DMV), in order to join forces. Previously, each club had run its own touring car racing event on the Nürburgring, lasting for 3.5 to 6 hours, with about 150 cars and 400 drivers taking part. The rules were unified and the races were made part of a series.

The winners of the series were awarded a Cup (German Pokal), sponsored by Valvoline and later Veedol lubrication products. Due to this, both organisation and races were simply informally called "Veedol-Cup" for many years. Since the change of sponsorship and the official recognition by Deutscher Motor Sport Bund (DMSB) as the German endurance championship (German Meisterschaft) in 2001, the former Veedol Langstreckenpokal Nürburgring was the BFGoodrich Langstreckenmeisterschaft Nürburgring. The name of the VLN organisation stays the same, though, which is reflected by their website addresses and title.

Apart from the 24 Hours, the Rundstrecken Challenge Nürburgring (RCN/CHC) and GLP are related smaller events dedicated to non-professionals.

Races

Each VLN race is held as a "one-day event" on Saturdays only, in order to limit costs. The mandatory drivers briefing is at 7:45, practice is from 8:30 to 10:00. following a warmup lap behind safety cars, the first of three groups starts the race at 12:00, followed by the other two a few minutes later, in time before the fastest cars complete their first lap in just over 8 minutes. After parc fermé is opened and the winners are honoured, the teams can travel home on race day. At some events, the schedule also accommodates additional sprint races of visiting other series, mainly classic cars and youngtimers.

The "6 hours" are considered the season highlight – in 1998, even Sir Jack Brabham took part, at age 72. Here, 2 to 4 drivers per cars are entered, while in all others races, a single driver can drive all alone for 4 hours, or up to 3 can form a team. Another highlight is the last race, the Münsterlandpokal, which is also called "Schinkenrennen" (ham race) as large pieces of ham from the Münsterland area are presented to class winners.

Most of the fans watch the race on the Nordschleife. To get to the favourite viewing points it is often necessary to take a walk. Several sections, including "Schwedenkreuz", "Adenauer Forst", "Karussell", and "Wippermann", are up to a kilometer away from the nearest main road. Easy to reach and always well attended are sections such as "Breidscheid", "Brünnchen", and "Pflanzgarten". Around the whole Nordschleife no entrance fee is raised. Just for the paddock and the grandstands on the Grand Prix circuit of the Nürburgring tickets for the price of 15 € are required.

Car classes

A variety of cars compete at the same time during each race. In the 2009 season, there were 30 classes of cars in four divisions.

Member organisations

Notable drivers

Driver Overall wins[1]
Jürgen Alzen 29
Olaf Manthey 28
Ullrich Richter 28
Arno Klasen 26
Marc Basseng 25
Edgar Dören 24
Peter Zakowski 22
Hans-Jürgen Tiemann 21
Marcel Tiemann 19
Marc Lieb 13
Otto Altenbach 12
Jürgen Oppermann 12
Jürgen Lässig 11
Uwe Alzen 10
Timo Bernhard 10
Lucas Luhr 10

See also

References

  1. Drivers with most overall wins Archived 5 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine. siteficial web - VLN of
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