2020 Superleague Lights season
From GPVWC Wiki
Revision as of 14:56, 20 January 2020 by Doug hilliard (Talk | contribs)
Competition | Superleague Lights |
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Title Sponsor | |
Platform Used | rFactor 2 |
Mod base | GPVWC CL modular |
Carshape base | F1-inspired |
Rounds | |
Engine Supplier(s) | Martex MX-06L 1600cc turbocharged V6 |
Tyre Supplier(s) | GPVWC brand G |
Drivers | |
Teams | 15 |
Drivers' Champion | |
Teams' Champion | |
Superleague Lights Seasons | |
2019 · 2020 · 2021 · 2022 · 2023 . 2024 |
GPVWC series in 2020 |
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Career Ladder |
Superleague |
The 2020 Superleague Lights season will be the 2nd GPVWC Superleague Lights season. Lukas Schmidt enters the season as defending Drivers' Champion, whilst 2019 Superleague Lights constructors champions Cosmo Seiki Japan took the step up to the Superleague series.
Contents
Teams and drivers
Entrant | Base | Chassis | Race Drivers | Test/Reserve Driver(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Driver Name | Rounds | ||||
Cenobite Motorsport | SLL020 | 68 | TBC | TBC | ||
69 | TBC | |||||
CM-Tech Racing | SLL020 | 25 | Dino Paolini | TBC | ||
26 | Tomasz Wach | |||||
Draig Racing | SLL020 | 24 | TBC | TBC | ||
40 | TBC | |||||
Fusion Racing | SLL020 | 55 | George Sutton | Ruben van den Hudding | ||
92 | Ben Horrill | |||||
Mayor Downard Racing Team | SLL020 | 17 | Jack Mayor | TBC | ||
44 | Lewis Bickers | |||||
mouseOne Racing | SLL020 | 18 | James Dziuba | TBC | ||
49 | Danny Robbins | |||||
Powered by RSR | SLL020 | 54 | Ryan Elliott | TBC | ||
67 | Sandeep Singh | |||||
Royal Blue Racing | SLL020 | 22 | Jukkapekka Lalu | TBC | ||
52 | Cas Rietveld | |||||
Scuderia Clay Geeli | SLL020 | 13 | TBC | TBC | ||
23 | TBC | |||||
STAX Racing | SLL020 | 36 | TBC | TBC | ||
37 | TBC | |||||
TCS Off Racing | SLL020 | 45 | TBC | TBC | ||
97 | TBC | |||||
TG Racing | SLL020 | 16 | Michael Francesconi | Daniel Hurlock | ||
33 | Jason Muscat | |||||
TR Motorsport | SLL020 | 53 | TBC | TBC | ||
88 | TBC | |||||
TTF Racing | SLL020 | 41 | Pedro Moura | TBC | ||
99 | Stefano Zanrosso | |||||
Zedderick Racing | SLL020 | 85 | Heigo Poom | TBC | ||
87 | Douwe Tapper |
Team changes
- Chaos Engineering, Cosmo Seiki Japan, Holland Racing Team and Red Arrow Racing were all promoted up to Superleague after the end of the 2019 season.
- Satellite Racing were dropped down to Supercup after the 2019 season.
- Netrex Grand Prix withdrew from GPVWC after the end of the 2019 season.
New entries
- MouseOne Racing, Powered By RSR, Fusion Racing, TG Racing, TCS Off Racing and reigning champions Zedderick Racing were all promoted from Supercup for 2020.
Technical changes
- To be Announced
2020 Calendar
The 2020 calendar follows the 16-round limit introduced in 2019.
Testing
The 2019 testing schedule was as follows:
Test | Date | Venue |
---|---|---|
Preseason Test #1 | TBC | TBD |
Preseason Test #2 | TBC | TBD |
Preseason Test #3 | TBC | TBD |
Preseason Test #4 | TBC | TBD |
Young Driver Test | TBC | Autódromo José Carlos Pace, São Paulo |
Calendar changes
- The Malaysian, Spanish and, controversially, Monaco Grands Prix were removed from the calendar. The Malaysian round had only been reintroduced in 2019, while the Spanish Grand Prix had been held, at different venues, since 2002. The Monaco Grand Prix, however, had been held every year since the formation of GPVWC, with the only exception of during the curtailed 2001 season.
- The Dutch, French and Russian Grands Prix were reintroduced. The French race was last held in 2018 while Russia had been absent since the end of 2017. The Dutch Grand Prix, together with Zandvoort, was last held in 2012, despite an aborted attempt to hold the Grand Prix at Assen in 2016.
External Links
Preceded by: 2019 |
GPVWC Superleague Lights season 2020 |
Succeeded by: 2021 |