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Irv Hoerr (born November 14, 1946) is an American racing driver from Peoria, Illinois. [1] He is primarily known for racing in several sports car racing series. Hoerr was the 1992 IMSA GTO champion. He moved up to the GTS-1 class winning the 1995 and 1996 titles. Hoerr made seven NASCAR Winston Cup Series starts and had two Top 10 finishes. [1]
The other three 1993 spec cars were the Holden VP Commodore's from the Holden Racing Team and Peter Brock's example. Australia's 1987 500cc Grand Prix World Champion Wayne Gardner made his touring car racing debut in the race partnering Sydney veteran Graham Moore in Moore's Holden VN Commodore SS Group A SV. Moore qualified the car in 21st ...
Back issue may refer to: A past (normally out-of-print) issue of a magazine or other periodical publication; Back Issue!, a US magazine featuring articles and arts about comics "Back Issues", the 1997 first episode of the US sitcom Just Shoot me!
Hörr began his open-wheel racing career in 2014, competing in a pair of races with Dutt Motorsport, a team he co-owned with Rolf and Oliver Dutt, in the Formula Renault 1.6 Northern European Cup. The following season, he scored his first open wheel victory at Anderstorp Raceway while competing in the Formula Renault 1.6 Nordic championship.
1981 IMSA race at Road Atlanta featuring GTO, GTU, and GTP cars [6] Robin McCall in the Hoerr Racing GTO Oldsmobile (1987) The 1971 season was the first racing season, and lasted six races. The early years of the series featured GT cars, similar to the European Group 2 and Group 4 classes, divided into four groups:
BB, PRIMEDIA Consumer Magazine Group (1987–2000) BBW, Various including Larry Flynt Publications Inc. (1979–2003) Between C & D (1983–1990) Beyond Fantasy Fiction (1953–1955) Big Brother (1992–2004) Bill Apters W O W Xtra Magazine, H&S Media Inc. (2000–2001) The Black Cat (1895–1922) Black Issues Book Review (1999–2007) Black ...
Car Craft named an annual All-Star drag racing team each year plus a lifetime achievement award. [2] On December 9, 2019, MotorTrend publisher TEN Publishing announced that they will cease publishing of Car Craft, alongside 18 other magazines. [3] March 2020 was the final issue of the magazine.
In August 2020, the magazine transitioned to a large-format bi-monthly that emphasized elegant design and deeply-reported features. Incoming Editor-in-Chief Mike Guy, who had previously launched The Drive for Time Inc., hired Executive Editor Daniel Pund and Creative Director Nathan Schroeder, and together they refashioned Road & Track as the ...