2022 Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie

45th season of the German endurance series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2022 Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie is the 45th season of the German endurance series (formerly VLN) run at the Nürburgring Nordschleife, and third run as the Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie (NLS).[1] The season began on 26 March and ended on 5 November.

Daniel Zils, Oskar Sandberg and Sindre Setsaas won the drivers championship in a BMW 330i, driving for Adrenalin Motorsport.[2][3] Scherer Sport Team Phoenix (Audi R8 LMS GT3 EVO II) won the overall teams championship (NLS Speed Trophy).[3]

Calendar

More information Rnd., Race ...
Rnd. Race Length Circuit Date
1 67. ADAC Westfalenfahrt 4 hours Germany Nürburgring Nordschleife 26 March
2 53. Adenauer ADAC Rundstrecken-Trophy 4 hours 23 April
3 45. RCM DMV Grenzlandrennen 4 hours 25 June
4 ROWE 6 Stunden ADAC Ruhr-Pokal-Rennen 6 hours 9 July
5 12 Stunden Nürburgring[4] 12 hours 9-11 September
6 54. ADAC Barbarossapreis 4 hours 8 October
7 PAGID Racing 46. DMV Münsterlandpokal 4 hours 22 October
8 46. NIMEX DMV 4-Stunden-Rennen 4 hours 5 November
Source:[5][6]
Close

Classes

Entries are split into multiple different classes. Current classes are:

More information Class, NLS specials ...
Class
NLS specials
SP2 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 1400 and 1749 cc.
SP2T Purpose-built racecars with a turbocharged-engine capacity between 1400 and 1749 cc and a turbocharger.
SP3 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 1750 and 1999 cc.
SP3T Purpose-built racecars with a turbocharged-engine capacity between 1750 and 1999 cc and a turbocharger.
SP4 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 2000 and 2499 cc.
SP4T Purpose-built racecars with a turbocharged-engine capacity between 2000 and 2499 cc and a turbocharger.
SP5 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 2500 and 2999 cc.
SP6 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 3000 and 3499 cc.
SP7 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 3500 and 3999 cc.
SP8 Purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity over 4000 cc.
SP8T Purpose-built racecars with a turbocharged-engine capacity between 2600 and 4000 cc.
SP9 For FIA-homologated Group GT3 cars.

GT3 sub-classes based on driver ranking system maintained by the FIA.
SP9 Pro,
SP9 Pro-Am &
SP9 Am
SP10 For FIA and SRO-homologated Group GT4 cars.
SP-Pro Prototype racecars with an engine capacity over 3000 cc.
SPX 'Special vehicles' which do not fit into any other class.
AT(-G) Vehicles using alternative fuel sources (e.g. electric, LPG, hydrogen, etc.)
TCR touring cars
TCR FIA-homologated TCR Touring Cars.
TCR sub-classes based on driver ranking system.
TCR Pro &
TCR Am
NLS production cars
V3 Production cars with an engine capacity between 1600 and 1999 cc.
V4 Production cars with an engine capacity between 2000 and 2499 cc.
V5 Production cars with an engine capacity between 2500 and 2999 cc.
V6 Production cars with an engine capacity over 3500 cc.
VT1 Production cars with an engine capacity between 1000 and 1999 cc and a turbocharger.
VT2 Production cars with an engine capacity between 2000 and 2999 cc and a turbocharger.
VT3 Production cars with an engine capacity over 3000cc and a turbocharger.
VT Hybrid[7] Production cars with a hybrid-engine.
VT Elektro Production cars with an electro-engine.
Porsche Endurance Trophy Nürburgring Cup Class cars[8]
Cup classes are for single make identical or near identical specification cars
Cup 2 Porsche 992 GT3 Cup cars.
Cup 3 Porsche Cayman GT4 Trophy cars.
Cup Class cars
Cup classes are for single make identical or near identical specification cars
Cup 5 BMW M2 CS cars.
Cup X KTM X-Bow Cup cars.
M240i BMW M240i Racing Cup cars.
OPC Opel Astra OPC cars.
Gruppe H historic cars
H2 Pre-2008 production cars and purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity up to 1999 cc.
H4 Pre-2008 production cars and purpose-built racecars with an engine capacity between 2000 and 6250 cc.
Source[9]
Close

Entry Lists

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI