Post by Lee on Jun 12, 2018 9:58:18 GMT
The Bahrain GT Festival, which takes place between the 30th November and 1 December 2018 and is held at the Bahrain International Circuit. The headline event will be the FIA GT Nations Cup, in which drivers from across the globe will compete for national glory.
The FIA GT Nations Cup will complement the FIA GT World Cup, which has taken place since 2015 on the iconic Macau street circuit. With the World Cup now reserved for Gold and Platinum drivers, and using a non-traditional GT format, the FIA decided to add an event to its calendar for Bronze and Silver drivers that followed more closely the usual one-hour GT3 race programme.
A maximum of one car will be entered per country, with each including a Silver and a Bronze driver of the same nationality. Drivers will be selected by their National Sporting Authority (ASN), while cars may be entered by any team, regardless of nationality, with one team permitted to enter cars for multiple nations.
The liveries of the cars will fundamentally integrate the national colours of the competitors to further add to the spectacle and make the competitors more easily identifiable to fans at the circuit and watching on television.
Two 80-minute practice sessions will allow competitors to familiarise themselves with the 5.4km Bahrain International Circuit, followed by two 20-minute qualifying sessions that will set the grid for a pair of 60-minute qualifying races. The event will conclude with a 60-minute main race that will crown the title-winning drivers and their country.
The FIA GT Nations Cup will complement the FIA GT World Cup, which has taken place since 2015 on the iconic Macau street circuit. With the World Cup now reserved for Gold and Platinum drivers, and using a non-traditional GT format, the FIA decided to add an event to its calendar for Bronze and Silver drivers that followed more closely the usual one-hour GT3 race programme.
A maximum of one car will be entered per country, with each including a Silver and a Bronze driver of the same nationality. Drivers will be selected by their National Sporting Authority (ASN), while cars may be entered by any team, regardless of nationality, with one team permitted to enter cars for multiple nations.
The liveries of the cars will fundamentally integrate the national colours of the competitors to further add to the spectacle and make the competitors more easily identifiable to fans at the circuit and watching on television.
Two 80-minute practice sessions will allow competitors to familiarise themselves with the 5.4km Bahrain International Circuit, followed by two 20-minute qualifying sessions that will set the grid for a pair of 60-minute qualifying races. The event will conclude with a 60-minute main race that will crown the title-winning drivers and their country.