Resurgence of the Aussie big bangers.
In the early 1990’s the Federation International Automobile’s (FIA) global touring car formula Group A was coming to an end, with spiraling costs and the failure of the World Touring Car Championship to last more then one season saw the auto-racing world to look to alternatives.

The Australian motor sport scene was dominated by domestic touring cars with the Australian Touring Car Championship (ATCC) racing across the nation but the Bathurst 1000km endurance race being the most prestigious domestic race in the country with manufactures hoping to use the ability to survive 161 laps at Mount Panorama to prove their cars durability to the watching public. The fearsome 6.213km pubic road circuit to the south of the New South Wales town of Bathurst had two long straights that meant power was important to getting a quick lap while the top of the mountain with the fast bends and the esses downhill meant good handling was needed to survive.

The years between 1967 and 84 saw the dominance of just two brands of Ford and Holden, General motors local subsidiary, as they brought locally built high powered family cars to win on Sunday and sell on Monday

1985 saw the race adopt the F.I,A group A rules, while it did not stop the big V8s from winning it did result in the Ford hero of Dick Johnson racing a Ford Sierra, a car that was not sold in Australia.

From 1988 there was a challenger to touring cars Australian dominance as entrepreneur and winner of the first Bathurst 500 mile race (the distance before metrification) Bob Jane had built Australia’s first high-banked oval nicknamed the Thunderdome and its own AUSCAR series. Fans began to switch over as V8 Holden Commodores and Ford Falcons won on the oval while turbo charged imports of the Sierra and Nissan Skyline GTR won at Bathurst.


At the end of 1991 the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS) announced a new set of touring car regulations would replace Group A in the ATCC and Bathurst and have the oval racing AUSCAR under the same rule set to increase the number of cars built to race, initially called Group 3A 5.0L Touring cars.



This is the POD as in OTL AUSCAR would remain separate and die in 2000. The other changes in TTL are that CAMS would make the new cars lap slower to make them not two far ahead of the new two litter cars that would race under the new FIA rules. They wanted to do this in OTL but Holden and Ford did not want that but in TTL they made a compromise that the V8s would be heavier and slower through the corners but faster on the straights, this resulted that on the shorter twisty tracks that made up most of the ATCC the two classes will be close but at Bathurst the two long straights the V8 would be able to be significantly faster.


Agreements had to be made between CAMS, AUSCAR (essentially Bob Jane), GM Holden, and Ford Australia. And an Initial agreement was made in February of 92

CAMS and AUSCAR agreed to the these rules about creating a racing Calender

  • The Australian Touring Car Championship (ATCC) will not schedule a round before the last Saturday (weekend) in February.
  • The ATCC rounds take priority between March and August excluding weekends where the Group 3A cars will support an international racing series.
  • AUSCAR rounds will take priority between November and February excluding weekends where the Group 3A cars will support an international racing series.
  • The ATCC calendar will be released by the First Monday of November the previous year.
  • That CAMS will not schedule a ATCC round conflict with an AUSCAR round if a change of date needs to be made after the Calender announcement in November.
  • No ATCC or AUSCAR rounds will be scheduled in the months of September and October to give room to the Endurance races.
  • That AUSCAR will only run oval races from the 1993-94 season when they will start using the Group 3A cars.
  • That AUSCAR will not schedule a conflict with the ATCC rounds announced by the First Monday of November the previous year.


CAMS agreed to the following conditions for the regulations of the Group 3A 5.0L touring cars.

  • The Group 3A Touring cars regulations would be written to allow the cars to be safe on an oval speedway, with appropriate crash structures.
  • Group 3A cars should be able to reach 300km/h on Conrod Straight Mount Panorama at the entrance to the Chase.
  • The car must use the unibody chassis from the production car.
  • Each car model will have one set of front splitter, side skirts, and rear diffuser homologated and only those homologated parts will be allowed.
  • The Cars will be required to only use body panels from the production cars including doors, bonnet, wheel arches no alternate panels will be allowed unless approved by CAMS and/or AUSCAR for reasons of safety.
  • The engines will be 5 Litre V8.
  • The Gearboxes will be six speed H-pattern manual.



Auscar obtained

  • AUSCAR can require the cars to fit non-production for reasons of safety e.g. removing the headlights to remove the danger of Glass on the track surface.
  • AUSCAR has the right to ban car parts, including the wheels and tyres that do not meet safety standards required to run on high banked ovals


Holden and Ford agreed to follow the following rules

  • The Manufactures must take a minimum 12 chassis off the production line and sell them to team to be transformed into race cars each financial year starting in the 1992-93 financial year.
  • The Manufactures must not favour their factory teams over other teams in the supply of chassis and must make a minimum of 9 chassis available each financial year to non-factory teams.
  • The manufactures must make every reasonable effort to supply parts to all the teams running their cars.

In May of 1992 Bob Jane was getting concerned, he was hearing that the Group 3A cars would be much more expensive to operate then the current AUSCAR cars and was threatening to pull out of the agreement with Ford backing Jane as they also feared the cost of supporting halve a field of expensive cars.

AUSCAR was cheaper because it used a conversion kit to transform the road cars into racecars while the established Touring car teams feared losing control over building their cars and CAMS did not want to be seen as supporting one company to obtain a monopoly over the production of touring cars.

The second weekend of May (9-10) was round two of the Australian Racing Drivers Club (ARDC) AMSCAR series at Amaroo Park on the north western edge of Sydney’s Suburbs. AMSCAR a shortening of Amaroo Super CARs. This racing series was exclusively held at Sydney Amaroo Park Raceway for touring car and in the early days had better prise money and Television coverage of the national ATCC. This was when another meeting was held by the ARDC between CAMS, Bob Jane, Holden, Ford, and Mike Raymond on behalf of the Seven Network TV station.

Reports from the meeting were that Jane was going on about how AUSCAR had a cheep kit to go racing while the CAMS representative kept rebutting that they would not allow their category to be dominated by a single supplier. The ARDC was also concerned by cost as the recession had reduced field sizes for the AMSCAR races with just eight at there for Sundays races. Mike Raymond was worried that having one kit needed for car eligibility would drive the engineering teams out of touring cars as teams such as Dick Johnson Racing, Perkins Engineering, Holden Racing Team (Walkinshaw), Glen Seaton Racing, and Gibson Motorsport would leave.

A compromise was able to be reached, a selection of teams would engineer their cars or kits for conversions and then could sell them for a pre-determined price to privateer teams. To oversee the teams a body would be formed to ensure costs are kept down and no one team could gain an advantage such as what was happening in the current season with Gibson Motorsport’s Nissan Skylines GTRs being utterly dominant in 1991 and so far in 92.

The body would be jointly owned by CAMS and the race promoters such as AUSCAR and the ARDC.

For a team to enter a race they would have to sign a contract to follow the rules and limit court action, as CAMS was in a current dispute with Gibson Motorsport as Fred Gibson was suing CAMS over the current handicapping of the GTRs.


The Announcement of the agreement was meet with a range of views among the big team bosses, mostly unfavourable. Some don’t like to be told what to do or how much to sell their cars, others annoyed that they were not involved in discussions and left out. Some demanding that they should be involved in further discussions. Some of the privateers were worried about being forced to buy from the big teams. There was also talk amongst the drivers worried that promoters getting together could lead to smaller prize purse for events and restrictions on where they could race.


Two weeks later the next round of the ATCC was underway at Eastern Creek Raceway in the heart of Sydney’s western Suburbs. Rules for next years cars had to be settled immediately as some teams were already building theirs as next years cars would be eligible for this years Sandown and Bathurst enduros in September and October.


CAMS stated that any Group 3A 5.0L Touring cars built by Bathurst would be eligible for next years championship even if they did not comply the rules agreed to later but they slowed down to equalise the lap times if needed. The new class would be called the Aussie V8 5L touring class. Bob Jane did offer for them to use the AUSCAR name for the whole category but CAMS did not want to use it.

It was decided by CAMS that they needed their own Concorde Agreement as used in F1 for a decade by then.



The final Agreement was signed at that supervisory corporation was to be established called the Australian Touring Car Oversight Body (ATCOB)

ATCOB was to oversee the rules agreed to by voting from the shareholder which are..

  • CAMS at 30%.
  • The race promoters as a group would have a 40% share with it be further divided based on this formula. Each promoter had two shares plus one share for each event they promote that year.
The Teams would be divided into three groups.

  • The teams that built Australian V8 touring cars themselves to race and sell These were called the constructors, at 5%.
  • Aussie V8 5L touring class privateers who bought cars from the constructors and did not have the right to build their own car at 5%.
  • The teams running cars to the FIA 2.0 Litre Class II Touring Cars in the ATCC and AMSCAR at 10%.
  • The Touring car driver’s representee Group (non-team owners) at 4%.
  • Holden and Ford at 3% each.
The number of votes corresponded to the shareholding



The constructors would comprise of…
  • Dick Johnson Racing (Ford).
  • Gibson Motorsport (Holden).
  • Glen Seaton Racing (Ford)
  • Holden Racing Team (Walkinshaw) (Holden).
  • Perkins Engineering (Holden).

These constructors signed agreed that they would sell three cars or kits to convert cars to a legal Australian V8 touring cars each year to privateers who wanted to race them and to continue to sell them parts. The cars they raced had to be the same as the cars they sold as not to have an advantage.
  • The cars would be built from the chassis of either the Holden Commodore or Ford Falcon taken from the production line and needed to have the following.
  • Rollcage made out of steal tubing and arranged in a way to protect and seat a driver and three passengers (one for each door) from impacts.
  • A 5L V8 Limited to 7500 RPM
  • A six speed H-pattern gearbox
  • The suspension
  • The steering system including power steering.
  • The electronic control unit.
  • Fuel tank that meets CAMS safety requirements.
  • Fuel lines.
  • Exhaust system.
  • Driveline System.

The Manufactures of Holden and Ford also needed to supply all teams racing their respective cars the following...
  • All the exterior panels for the from the road car.
  • The Homologated side skirts, front splitter and diffuser.
  • The front and rear panels without lights for the Oval Races.
  • The side mirrors.
  • Windows
  • Lights

All Teams would be free to obtain parts from wherever on this list…
  • Wheels
  • Tyres
  • Brake discs and pads
  • Brake lines
  • Pedal boxes
  • Dials (rev counter, speedometer etc).
  • Racing Seats with a full 5-point safety harness.
  • Fire extinguisher
  • Filters (air, oil, and fuel)
  • Oil.
  • Paint/stickers.



Also the promoters had to provide…

  • All the fuel to be used for the event at a reasonable price.
  • Space to work on the cars between sessions, must be flat and included in the entry fees,
  • Power and Light for the work areas.
  • All mandatory event sponsors stickers.
  • Catering for the event and include provision for dietary needs.


The Ground was set for a system that would put Australian touring car racing to world wide attention.
 
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This is going to be my motorsport time line focusing on the Australian V8, In TTL the name V8 supercars wont be used. I may not stick to writing a linear time line.
 
I see a bit of a problem here: the Falcon and Commodore saw very limited sales outside of Australia and New Zealand, and your ownership structure makes the likelihood of a fight amongst the owners almost unavoidable. Unless you plan on having the two-litre teams all move to the ATCC or AUSCAR the point of them having a share is lacking and the track promoters are gonna fight like hell amongst each other.
 
I see a bit of a problem here: the Falcon and Commodore saw very limited sales outside of Australia and New Zealand, and your ownership structure makes the likelihood of a fight amongst the owners almost unavoidable. Unless you plan on having the two-litre teams all move to the ATCC or AUSCAR the point of them having a share is lacking and the track promoters are gonna fight like hell amongst each other.
That just makes it more interesting, this timeline will be more about politics, i may not even post full race results.
 
Bob Jane’s Gamble
Building Australia’s first high Banked paved oval and bringing NASCAR to Australia in 1988 cost at least 50 million initially, and in an interview later in his life Jane said it cost all up halve a billion.

Jane was a savvy business man with his tyre company Bob Jane’s T-mart having stores all over the country, while he used his own company to sponsor his passion he was always looked for other sponsors for his series.
A major Sponsor Jane made a deal with was the Victorian Government with the Don’t Drink Drive slogan pasted all over the NASCAR and AUSCAR race promotions and programs, a part of the agreement was the banning of cigarette sponsorship from Calder Park, preventing most national series whom had some cars and sometimes the series itself sponsored by tobacco companies.

In OTL this was a major rift between Jane and CAMS. In this alternate timeline the people at CAMS pull their head in and realise tobacco sponsorship would not last long and having government on side was a good idea.

This did have the ironic effect that a privately owned Calder Park in Victoria banned cigarette advertising while the Government owned Eastern Creek Raceway in Sydney had events sponsored by a cigarette brand.

As a result Calder Park would not host a round of the ATCC until the Federal Government bad cigarette advertising in 1996.
 
1993 Australian Touring Car Oversight Body combined Calendar
Class abbreviation and description

Group 3A Touring – 3A – Normally aspirated, two wheel drive cars complying with the 1992 CAMS Group 3A regulations

Aussie V8 5L Touring – V8 – The new combined regulations

2.0 Litre Class II Touring Cars – 2L - The new FIA touring car regulations

AUSCAR – The original AUSCAR cars before the change to the new combined regulations

Group 3E Series Production Cars - Cars from the Australian Production Car Championship, only in the Sandown 500.


WkDateTrackEventChampionshipClassesLocation
1Jan 3
2
3
4
5Jan 22-24Eastern Creek RacewayWinfield Triple ChallengeN/A3A, V8, 2L, AUSCARSydney, N.S.W
6Feb 7
7Feb 14Calder Park ThunderdomeAUSCAR Round 41992-93 AUSCARAUSCARMelbourne, VIC
8
9Feb 26-28Amaroo ParkATCC Rnd1
AMSCAR Rnd 1
1993 ATCC & 1993 AMSCAR3A, V8, 2L,Sydney, N.S.W
10Mar 7
11Mar 12-14Symmons Plains RacewayATCC Round 21993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Launceston, TAS
12Mar 19-21Surfers Paradise Street CircuitAUSCAR Round 51992-93 AUSCARAUSCARGold Coast, QLD
13
14April 4Philip Island Grand Prix CircuitATCC Round 31993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Philip Island, Vic
15
16April 16-18Lakeside International RacewayATCC Round 41993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Brisbane, QLD
17April 25Calder Park ThunderdomeAUSCAR Round 61992-93 AUSCARAUSCARMelbourne, VIC
18May 2
19
20May 14-16Winton Motor RacewayATCC Round 51993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Benalla, VIC
21
22
23June 4-6Eastern Creek RacewayATCC Round 61993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Sydney, N.S.W
24
25June
20
Amaroo ParkAMSCAR Round 21993 AMSCAR3A, V8, 2L,Sydney, N.S.W
26
27July 2-4Mallala Motor Sport ParkATCC Round 71993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Mallala, S.A
28July 9-11Barbargallo RacewayATCC Round 81993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Perth, W.A
29July 15-16Lake PerkolilliSuitability test for racing on the clay panN/AV8, AUSCARKalgoorlie. W.A
30July 25Amaroo ParkAMSCAR Round 21993 AMSCAR3A, V8, 2L,Sydney, N.S.W
31Aug 1
32Aug
6-8
Oran Park Raceway
Grand Prix Circuit
ATCC Round 91993 ATCC3A, V8, 2L,Sydney, N.S.W
33
34
35
36Sep 5
37Sept 10-12Sandown International RacewaySandown 500N/A3A, V8, 2L, Group 3E Series Production CarsMelbourne, VIC
38
39
40Sept30-Oct 3Mount Panorama Circuit1993 Tooheys 1000
(Bathurst 1000)
N/A3A, V8, 2LBathurst N.S.W
41
42
43
44
45Nov 5-7Adelaide Street Circuit

Ultimate Peter Jackson Dash​

At the Australian Grand Prix
N/A3A, V8, 2LAdelaide, S.A
46Nov 12-13Adelaide International Raceway OvalAUSCAR round 11993-94 AUSCARV8Adelaide, S.A
47
48
49Dec 4-5Calder Park ThunderdomeAUSCAR round 21993-94 AUSCARV8Melbourne, VIC
50
51
52
 
The 1993 season: part 1
The Silly season
With the confirmation that the touring cars would race on the ovals Holden forced Walkinshaw’s Holden Racing Team to comit to building a car that was fast on ovals as well as road courses. Holden also pressured Walkinshaw to hire HRT endurance driver Allan Grice because of his experience in AUSCAR and NASCAR having raced at the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte was signed as a full season driver for 1993 to race in the ATCC and AUSCAR at the Sandown 500 on the 13th of September. On the 19th of September Allan Grice won a very different race, he became the Member of Broadwater in the Queensland Parliament. This was a bit of a concern for Walkinshaw as his new signing just got another job, Grice remarked that he would be a backbench in opposition so he could do both and races were on weekends when sitting were not and that HRT could schedule test days for non-siting weeks.

The first event: Winfield triple challenge January 24
Two new V8 class cars were debuted for the non-championship event at Sydney’s Eastern Creek Raceway although most of the field was running last year’s group 3A cars with added weight to slow them to the V8 class. The 2L class with a few Toyotas and BMW’s, and a few of the current AUSCAR cars to bolster the field.
The two new cars were Gibson Motorsport’s Commodore driven by Jim Richards and Glen Seaton’s new Ford Falcon while Seaton’s team mate Alan Jones was in the older 3A car used the previous year.

ATCC round one: Amaroo
The short 1.9km Amaroo Park circuit was situated in Sydney’s pictures Hills district north west of the CBD, the track had been a stable of Touring cars as the Seven Network broadcast the AMSCAR series from there due to being close the their Epping studios and the short track reduced the cameras needed for full coverage.
This would be the first test for the new regulations. With 8 cars entered for the 2 Litter class and 22 of the cars for the 3A and V8 classes
 
The 1993 Season: part 2
In 1993 the ATCC rounds were split into 2 heats for the classes (one heat per class) and then a combined final with each class lining up on each side of the grid until the class with the fewest cars runs out of entries and then the rest of the grid if filed by the other class. It was decided that the old 2.5L group 3A BMW would race in the 2L heats creating a 12 and 18 car heats respectively At Amaroo the top v8 cars were slightly quicker but the 2L cars were as fast as the middle of the v8 field

The classes are (V8) are the new 5L V8 cars, (3A/V8) are the older group a cars slowed down, (3A) are the group A BMW’s that are 2.5L and (2L) are the 2L cars, Only the 2L cars and not the 3A cars will earn points for the 2L class even though they are in those heats. Only 6 new V8 cars actually debut at Amaroo Park

Grid for the round one final at Amaroo Park.
Left (2L) and (non V8 3A)Right (V8) and (3A/V8)
2: Paul Moris – 23 – LoGaMo Racing – BMW M3 (3A)1: Glen Seton – 30 – Glen Seton Racing – Ford Falcon (3A/V8)
4: Tony Longhurst – 25 – LoGaMo Racing – BMW M3 (3A)3: John Bowe – 18 – Dick Johnson Racing - Ford Falcon (V8)
6: Peter Doulman – 53- M3 Motorsport – BMW M3 (2L)5: Mark Skaife – 1 – Gibson Motorsport – Holden Commodore (V8)
8: John Smith – 6 – Colin Bond Racing – Toyota Sprinter (2L)7: Tomas Mezera – 15 – Holden Racing Team - Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
10: John Cotter – 52 - M3 Motorsport – BMW M3 (2L)9: Dick Johnson – 17 – Dick Johnson Racing - Ford Falcon (V8)
12: Brad Stratton – 72 - Brad Stratton - Toyota Sprinter (2L)11: Jim Richards – 2 – Gibson Motorsport – Holden Commodore (V8)
14: Colin Bond – 8 – Colin Bond Racing – Toyota Sprinter (2L)13: Alan Grice – 16 – Holden Racing Team – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
16: Mike Conway – 79 – Mike Conway – Toyota Sprinter (2L)15: Alan Jones – 35 – Glen Seton Racing – Ford Falcon (V8)
18: Frank Binding – 75 - Frank Binding - Toyota Sprinter (2L)17: Peter Brock – 05 – Advantage Racing – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
20: Ken Talbert – 88 - Ken Talbert – Toyota Sprinter (2L)19: Larry Perkins – 11 – Perkins Engineering – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
22: John Blanchard – 20 – LoGaMo Racing – BMW M3 (3A)21: Neil Crompton – 7 – Bob Forbs Racing - Holden Commodore (V8)
24: Geoffrey Full – 24 – LoGaMo Racing – BMW M3 (3A)23: Trevor Ashby – 3 – Lansvale Racing Team – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
26: Bob Pearson – 33 - Bob Pearson – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)25: Terry Finnigan – 27 – Terry Finnigan – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
28: Michael Donaher – 26 - Michael Donaher – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)27: Chris Smerdon – 39 - Chris Smerdon – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
30: Glenn Mason – 42 - Glenn Mason – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)29: Bob Jones – 12 - Bob Jones – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
 
New Locations
The Amaroo Park race was dominated by the V8 class as expected due to the track while short only had two main braking zones so the power of the Commodores and Falcons outpaced the more nimble 2L class cars. The 2.5L BMW could race with the V8 but still dropped down the field with Longhurst being sixth overall. The highest 2L car was Peter Doulman in the BMW M3 finishing in 18th position overall.

The Amaroo top 10

1. Glen Seton – 30 – Glen Seton Racing – Ford Falcon (3A/V8)
2. Mark Skaife – 1 – Gibson Motorsport – Holden Commodore (V8)
3. John Bowe – 18 – Dick Johnson Racing - Ford Falcon (V8)
4. Tomas Mezera – 15 – Holden Racing Team - Holden Commodore (3A/V8)
5. Dick Johnson – 17 – Dick Johnson Racing - Ford Falcon (V8)
6. : Tony Longhurst – 25 – LoGaMo Racing – BMW M3 (3A)
7. Alan Grice – 16 – Holden Racing Team – Holden
8. Alan Jones – 35 – Glen Seton Racing – Ford Falcon (V8)
9. Paul Moris – 23 – LoGaMo Racing – BMW M3 (3A)
10. Peter Brock – 05 – Advantage Racing – Holden Commodore (3A/V8)



Round 2 Symmons Plains Raceway – Tasmania

The second round headed over the Bass Strait to the Island states premier motor racing circuit. Unsurprisingly only 20 cars made the trip in the ferry.
There were thirteen V8 cars, four 2.5L BMWs and three 2L cars.

CAMS announced that for this round all the classes will be combined into the same heat with the grid for the main race being the finishing order of the heat, In effect making it a sprint race and a feature race.

Symmons Plains was another track dominated by the v8 class as the fast back straight made it easy to get past the smaller engine cars.

AUSCAR at Indy
The fifth and penultimate round of the 1992-93 AUSCAR championship was a support class for the Gold Coast Indycar race. The Indycar event in its first years was not supported by CAMS leaving a gap for Bob Jane to send his series to fill up its schedule and thus AUSCAR raced on the streets of Surfers Paradise.

Due to the agreement with CAMS this would be the last AUSCAR championship race on a street/road course. The next year there would be a non-championship race for the touring cars the same as the Australian Grand Prix in Adelaide.

Just before the Indycar race on the Sunday the Queensland Government announced that it would build a 2 mile speedway over in a clay mine next to the Willowbank Dragway south-west of the Outer Brisbane suburb of Ipswich. The plan being that have the Gold Coast race one weekend then the Speedway race the next weekend splitting the costs of flying the cars from the US as well as hosting the local oval series.

Edited coal to clay mine in the last paragraph. I made an assumption and did not do a quick search.
 
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The next ATCC round was also off the Australian mainland but unlike Tasmania, Phillip Island is connected by a bridge to the rest off Victoria. The current bridge to Phillip Island was only opened in 1969, before it was a wooden bridge that changed Australian motorsport history. The Bathurst 1000 race was originally held at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in 1960, 61, & 62 as a 500 mile (800km) race. After the 62 race the cold mix bitumen broke up and became dangerous and the bridge would not hold the weight of a hot-mix bitumen machine, without the ability to have a suitable surface and the cost of repairs the Phillip Island track closed and was a sheep farm for the next 25 years while the 500 mile race was moved to Bathurst’s Mount Panorama Circuit.

Round four of the ATCC went up to Queensland to the Lakeside Circuit, so named because it is next to Lake Kurwongbah north of Brisbane.

Both rounds were dominated by the Fords.

The Final Round of the AUSCAR 92-93 championship was held and Brad Jones won the Championship for the fourth consecutive time.
 
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