Circuit Paul Armagnac

Circuit Paul Armagnac
LocationNogaro, Gers, France
Time zoneCET (UTC+1)
CEST (DST)
Coordinates43°46′5″N 0°2′17″W / 43.76806°N 0.03806°W / 43.76806; -0.03806
FIA Grade2
Opened3 October 1960; 64 years ago (1960-10-03)
Major eventsCurrent:
Coupes de Pâques de Nogaro
(1968–present)
FFSA GT (1997–2011, 2014, 2016–present)
Alpine Elf Europa Cup (2019–present)
Former:
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
French motorcycle Grand Prix (1978, 1982)
European Truck Racing Championship (1994–2016)
Blancpain Sprint Series (2013–2015)
NASCAR Whelen Euro Series (2009–2013)
FIA GT (2007–2008)
FIA Sportscar Championship (2003)
BPR GT (1995–1996)
F3000 (1990–1993)
ETCC (1985–1988)
Formula 750 (1976, 1979)
Sidecar World Championship (1978)
Websitehttp://www.circuit-nogaro.com/
Grand Prix Circuit (1989–present)[a]
Length3.636 km (2.259 miles)
Turns14
Race lap record1:20.160 (Italy Alessandro Zanardi, Reynard 91D, 1991, F3000)
Grand Prix Circuit (1973–1988)
Length3.120 km (1.939 miles)
Turns11
Race lap record1:11.860 (Argentina Ricardo Zunino, Arrows A1, 1979, F1)
Original Circuit (1960–1973)
Length1.752 km (1.089 miles)
Turns9
Race lap record0:51.700 (France Christian Ethuin, Martini MK12, 1973, F3)

Circuit Paul Armagnac, also known as Circuit de Nogaro, is a motorsport race track located in the commune of Nogaro in the Gers department in southwestern France. The track is named in honor of Nogaro-born racing driver Paul Armagnac, who died in an accident during practice for the 1962 1000 km de Paris at the Montlhéry circuit.[1]


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  1. ^ Foubert, Claude. "Le circuit de Nogaro fête ses 50 ans…". Endurance-Info.com. Laurent Mercier. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2015.