
Super Touring, Class 2 or Class II was a
motor racing touring car category defined by the
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile
The Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA; ) is an international organisation with two primary functions surrounding use of the automobile. Its mobility division advocacy, advocates the interests of motoring organisations, the automot ...
(FIA) for national
touring car racing
Touring car racing is a motorsport road racing competition that uses race-prepared touring cars. It has both similarities to and significant differences from stock car racing, which is popular in the United States.
While the cars do not move a ...
in 1993. It was based on the "2 litre Touring Car Formula" created for the
British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) in 1990. The FIA organised a
World Cup for the category each year from 1993 to 1995, and adopted the term ''super tourer'' from 1995.
Super Touring replaced
Group A as the norm in nearly every touring car championship across the world, but escalating costs, and the withdrawal of
works teams caused the category to collapse in the late 1990s because of the loosely regulated aerodynamics required the team to invest resources equivalent as a professional Formula 1 team, and the 8,500 rpm speed limit required the team to use extremely unusual construction in engine modifications to allow the engine to break through more than 300 horsepower.
An example for this was the German
Super Tourenwagen Cup (STW) series, which ran from 1994 to 1999, filling a void left after the end of the 2.5-litre
V6-powered
Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft (DTM) in 1996. In 2000, the
Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (keeping the "DTM" acronym) resumed with 4.0-litre
V8-powered cars.
Regulations

The Super Touring cars were required to be a minimum of in length, with four doors, effectively requiring a small family
saloon car as a minimum. No more than 2 litres engine capacity, maximum of six
cylinders were permitted, and the engine was required to be naturally aspirated. Only two wheels could be driven and steered. For
homologation
Homologation (Greek language, Greek ''homologeo'', ὁμολογέω, "to agree") is the granting of approval by an official authority. This may be a court of law, a government department, or an academic or professional body, any of which would n ...
, initially at least 2,500 units of the model used must have been produced. In 1995, in a bid to counter the increasing numbers of homologation specials, this number was increased to at least 25,000 units.
There was no restriction on body size and doors until 1993, when it was changed to only allow cars with a minimum of four doors and no smaller than the
Euro NCAP '
Small Family Car' class, although '
Large Family Car' tends to dominate the category. Until 1995, teams were only permitted to fit aerodynamic device that were available through dealers, but that changed when, in 1994 BTCC season,
Alfa Romeo entered a
155 with
Gabriele Tarquini and
Giampiero Simoni as drivers. The car had a front spoiler with a bottom piece that could be unscrewed and moved forward, acting as a splitter, and a rear spoiler with a pair of extensions, giving the car more downforce. When Alfa Romeo won the first five rounds, Ford, supported by Vauxhall, made a complaint to the race stewards. TOCA soon decided the aero devices were illegal and Alfa Romeo were stripped of the points they earned at Snetterton and Silverstone (although this decision was later reversed by appeal) and in return, walked out from the Oulton Park race. After this, Alfa were forced to run their spoilers in the retracted position (the position in which the spoilers were fitted on the road going version, the Alfa 155 Silverstone – of which only 2,500 cars were homologated to allow the use of the aerodynamic devices and higher rev limits for a 1.8-litre car – though the road car was sold with two unfitted spoiler extension brackets). In the meantime, Renault and BMW responded by introducing their own limited edition road cars (Laguna Airflow and 318is, respectively) to enable them to run with oversized aerodynamic aids; Renault would win the Oulton Park race that Alfa Romeo had walked out. Soon after that, the FIA changed the regulation in all series to increase minimum number of produced road cars for homologation to 25,000, and allowing cars to only use non-production aerodynamic devices with a restricted size.
Restrictions varied depending on body type, with
Volvo
The Volvo Group (; legally Aktiebolaget Volvo, shortened to AB Volvo, stylized as VOLVO) is a Swedish multinational manufacturing corporation headquartered in Gothenburg. While its core activity is the production, distribution and sale of truck ...
having to revert from the
850 Estate to their four-door saloon model the following season when they found themselves to be disadvantaged by the new rules. In the Italian Supertourismo category, teams entered extended spoilers without complaints.
Some series however, would change the rules to suit crowd demands and competition from rival series. One example was the
Japanese Touring Car Championship (JTCC), which made increases to body width and exhaust noise while restricting front aerodynamic devices in 1997 (which allowed Toyota to use the larger
Toyota Chaser); it ultimately backfired when Nissan and Honda left the series at the end of the season, leaving Toyota as the only manufacturer that competed. In 1999, a new formula using spaceframe cars came to nothing, and the series was abandoned altogether, as by then Japan's big three all had works entries in the then-
JGTC.
In Australia, the series began in 1993 when the Group A regulations for the
Australian Touring Car Championship series was replaced by
Supercars Group 3A Formula (known as V8 Supercars from 1997 onwards) and Super Touring. The advent of a new management structure and telecast arrangement for V8 Supercars put them in conflict with
Bathurst 1000 organisers. Super Touring were offered the chance to compete at Bathurst after race organisers could not come to terms with V8 Supercars. Bathurst City Council and V8 Supercars came to a separate arrangement to host their own breakaway "Australian 1000 Classic" race. Super Touring did not become a viable option, and the third and final race was transformed into a motorsport carnival, with several categories attending and the Super Touring event halved to , before collapsing in the aftermath of the 1999 race. In 2000, in the absence of a rival, the V8 Supercars event took up the Bathurst 1000 name.
During the Super Touring's long run, the category suffered two fatal accidents. In 1995,
Gregg Hansford at
Phillip Island, and
Kieth O'dor at
Avus, were involved in fatal accidents as a result of a broken neck caused by their cars' being
hit side-on. Soon after, rollcages in competition cars with built-in side impact bars, and seats with head restraints on the side would become mandatory.
One reason for Super Touring's demise was the cost of preparing a car for competition. In 1990, a
Vauxhall Cavalier cost £60,000. By the later part of the 1990s a similar car with more sophisticated aerodynamics device and telemetry cost £250,000.
The later
World Touring Car Championship Super 2000 regulations were inspired by the Super Touring regulations, with production-based four-door
saloons powered by 2.0-litre engines. Wider wheel arches are allowed to Install even though production vehicles that are not equipped, so the team doesn’t have to expand the wheel arches inwards and redesign the suspension layout in order to fit wider tires without widening the body width, as was the case during the super touring era, which would lead to higher costs due to over engineering.
Although it bears no resemblance to its predecessor, the "Super Touring" name was retained by the
Championnat de France de Supertourisme for their 3.0-litre
tube frame cars.
List of championships that used the Super Touring formula
List of Supertouring homologated cars
Statistics
Wins by manufacturer
The table includes wins from four of the most competitive series that used Super Touring regulations:
British Touring Car Championship (BTCC),
Japanese Touring Car Championship (JTCC), German
Super Tourenwagen Cup (STW), and
European Super Touring Championship (Euro STC).
See also
*
Group 2 (racing)
*
Group A
*
Class 1 Touring Cars
*
Super 2000
*
Diesel 2000
*
TCR Touring Car
*
BTC Touring
*
Next Generation Touring Car
References
External links
SuperTouring.co.uk– history of Super Touring
SuperTouringRegister.com– archive of cars built to Super Touring regulations
SuperTouringCars.net– Super Touring homepage with cars, facts, links, news, parts, photos
*
ttp://www.Supertcc.com Supertcc.com– HSCC Super Touring Car Championship
{{Super Touring championships
Racing car classes
Touring car racing
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile
Motorsport categories in Australia