Calendar
Race No | Track | Country | Date | Laps | Distance | Time | Speed | Winner | Pole Position | Fastest Race Lap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Suzuka | Japan | March 8, 1992 | 34 | 5.864=199.376 km | 1'01:37.309 | 194.129 km/h | Ross Cheever | Ross Cheever | Ross Cheever |
2 | Fuji | Japan | April 12, 1992 | 45 | 4.470=201.15 km | 0'59:40.421 | 202.250 km/h | Paulo Carcasci | Ross Cheever | Mauro Martini |
3 | Mine | Japan | May 10, 1992 | 62 | 3.239=200.818 km | 1'19:51.708 | 150.874 km/h | Eddie Irvine | Eddie Irvine | Mauro Martini |
4 | Suzuka | Japan | May 24, 1992 | 26 | 5.864=152.464 km | 0'48:32.513 | 188.453 km/h | Volker Weidler | Ross Cheever | Masanori Sekiya |
5 | Autopolis | Japan | July 19, 1992 | 43 | 4.674=200.982 km | 1'08:48.305 | 175.262 km/h | Marco Apicella | Eddie Irvine | Mauro Martini |
6 | Sugo | Japan | August 2, 1992 | 54 | 3.704=200.016 km | 1'05:57.726 | 181.937 km/h | Volker Weidler | Ross Cheever | Takuya Kurosawa |
7 | Fuji | Japan | August 16, 1992 | 45 | 4.470=201.15 km | 1'00:20.632 | 200.004 km/h | Mauro Martini | Ross Cheever | Ross Cheever |
8 | Fuji | Japan | September 6, 1992 | 45 | 4.470=201.15 km | 0'59:24.637 | 203.146 km/h | Toshio Suzuki | Roland Ratzenberger | Mauro Martini |
9 | Suzuka | Japan | September 27, 1992 | 35 | 5.864=205.241 km | 1'04:33.949 | 190.727 km/h | Roland Ratzenberger | Roland Ratzenberger | Toshio Suzuki |
10 | Fuji | Japan | October 18, 1992 | 45 | 4.470=201.15 km | 0'58:49.751 | 205.153 km/h | Toshio Suzuki | Eddie Irvine | Andrew Gilbert Scott |
11 | Suzuka | Japan | November 15, 1992 | 35 | 5.864=205.241 km | 1'03:45.511 | 193.142 km/h | Naoki Hattori | Ross Cheever | Kazuyoshi Hoshino |
Note: Race 4 shortened because of a crash on Lap 27 between Hitoshi Ogawa and Andrew Gilbert Scott that killed Ogawa, past the 75% distance rule.
Read more about this topic: 1992 Japanese Formula 3000 Season
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“To divide ones life by years is of course to tumble into a trap set by our own arithmetic. The calendar consents to carry on its dull wall-existence by the arbitrary timetables we have drawn up in consultation with those permanent commuters, Earth and Sun. But we, unlike trees, need grow no annual rings.”
—Clifton Fadiman (b. 1904)
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