Activez la localisation géographique pour une meilleure expérience.
logo
Tour Pilote Organisation Modifié Voiture Modèle Variation de piste
Voiture
Voiture Motocyclette
Métrique
Métrique USA
French
English Spanish German Italian Portuguese Russian Japanese
Connexion / Créez un compte
  • Pistes
  • track_changes
    Tours
  • Voitures
  • Trackday
  • Classement Pneus
  • Pilotes
  • à propos
+ Add
Tour
Pilotes
Organisation
Modifié Voiture
Modèle
Variation de piste
French
English Spanish German Italian Portuguese Russian Japanese
Voiture
Voiture Motocyclette
Connexion / Créez un compte
Modifier Retirer
++USER.DRIVER.DISPLAY_NAME++
++CREATED_AT++
++USER.ALIAS++
++CREATED_AT++
++COMMENT++
++NAME++ (++CITY++)
++COUNTRY++

Saarbrucken

Trackday Pistes Organisations Pilotes

Saarbrücken is "the city that doesn't know who it is." Saarbrücken is capital of Saarland. Saarland is Germany's smallest federal state (except city-states). Population about 180,000. Saarbrücken is on French border. Saarbrücken was once German. Then French. Then German again. Then French. Then German again. Saarbrücken residents changed nationality six times. In 150 years. Saarbrücken residents no longer know who they are. Are Saarbrücken residents German? French? Saarbrücken residents say: "We are Saarlanders." That's not answer. That's evasion.

Saarbrücken was coal and steel city. Heavy industry. Mining. Steel mills. Black smoke. Dirty hands. Saarbrücken residents pulled coal from earth. Saarbrücken residents melted steel. Saarbrücken built Germany. After war. Saarbrücken residents were proud. Saarbrücken residents were workers. But mines are closed. Steel mills are closed. Last coal mine closed 2012. Saarbrücken has no more industry. Saarbrücken is unemployed. Saarbrücken is poor. Saarbrücken residents don't know what they are now. Before they were "steel workers." Now they are "nothing."

From Saarbrücken to Nürburgring is about 120 kilometers. About 1.5 hours by car. Saarbrücken is relatively close to motorsport. But Saarbrücken residents aren't interested in motorsport. Why? Because Saarbrücken residents have complicated relationship with "speed." For Saarbrücken residents, speed means "loss." Everything in Saarbrücken disappeared quickly. Coal. Steel industry. Jobs. Young people. Saarbrücken residents fear speed. Speed means "change." And change means "loss." Saarbrücken residents don't want change anymore. Saarbrücken residents want standstill. Motorsport is opposite of standstill.

Saarbrücken has economic contradiction. Saarbrücken has highest debt of all German federal states. Per capita. Saarbrücken is bankrupt. Saarbrücken lives on transfer payments. From Berlin. From Brussels. Saarbrücken residents take money. But Saarbrücken residents produce nothing. Before, Saarbrücken residents produced steel. Coal. Now Saarbrücken residents produce "debt." Motorsport is production. Cars. Engines. Technology. Saarbrücken residents forgot how to produce. Saarbrücken residents can only "take." But no longer "give."

Saarbrücken is on border with France. Five minutes to France. Saarbrücken residents could be international. Saarbrücken residents could live two cultures. German efficiency. French lifestyle. But Saarbrücken residents are neither German nor French. Saarbrücken residents are "in-between." Saarbrücken residents speak own dialect. "Saarländisch." Neither properly German nor properly French. Saarbrücken residents eat "Schwenkbraten." A Saarland dish. Not German. Not French. Saarbrücken residents are "isolated." Saarbrücken residents belong nowhere. This identity crisis prevents motorsport interest. Must know who you are to have passion. Saarbrücken residents don't know who they are.

Saarbrücken has special relationship with cars. Saarbrücken residents love French cars. Peugeot. Citroën. Renault. Why? Because France is close. And because French cars are cheaper. Saarbrücken residents drive to France. Tank in France. Buy in France. Saarbrücken residents are "border crossers." But Saarbrücken residents aren't interested in performance. Saarbrücken residents are interested in "cheap." A Peugeot 208. Small. Economical. Slow. For Saarbrücken residents, car is "transport." Not "sport object." Saarbrücken residents drive to shop. Not for fun.

Saarbrücken once had vision. In 1950s. Saarbrücken wanted to become "European center." A bridge between Germany and France. Saarbrücken wanted to be important. But vision failed. Saarbrücken became German again. 1957. Saarbrücken was forgotten. Today Saarbrücken is peripheral. Saarbrücken is "on edge." Saarbrücken is insignificant. Saarbrücken residents gave up their dreams. Saarbrücken residents live in resignation. Motorsport is dream. Motorsport is ambition. Saarbrücken residents have no more ambitions.

Saarbrücken has demographic problem. Young people leave. To Frankfurt. To Munich. To Berlin. Saarbrücken loses inhabitants every year. Saarbrücken dies slowly. Saarbrücken residents who stay are old. Tired. Resigned. Saarbrücken residents wait for retirement. Saarbrücken residents wait for death. Motorsport is young. Motorsport is energy. Motorsport is life. Saarbrücken is opposite. Saarbrücken is old. Saarbrücken is tired. Saarbrücken is death.

Saarbrücken and motorsport have material incompatibility. Before, Saarbrücken produced steel. Heavy. Hard. Gray. Motorsport today is carbon. Light. Flexible. Black. Saarbrücken is past. Heavy industry. Welding. Hammering. Motorsport is future. Composite materials. 3D printing. Aerodynamics. Saarbrücken residents don't understand carbon. Saarbrücken residents understand steel. But steel is dead. Saarbrücken residents stand in their closed steel mills. Rusty machines. Broken windows. Saarbrücken residents remember: "Here we once built cars." But that was yesterday. Today Saarbrücken residents build nothing anymore. 120 kilometers away, at Nürburgring, they still build cars. Racing cars. Carbon cars. Future cars. But Saarbrücken residents don't look there. Saarbrücken residents look backward. At their dead steel mills. At their closed mines. Saarbrücken residents live in past. Motorsport lives in future. That's why Saarbrücken residents and motorsport never meet.

Trackday

Nom
Piste
Organisation
Date
Nom: Chambley
Piste: Circuit de Chambley
Organisation: Europa Trackdays
track.date: 2025-12-13
Nom: Chenevières
Piste: Circuit de Chenevières
Organisation: Europa Trackdays
track.date: 2025-12-20
Pistes
Piste
Localisation
Longueur km
Tours
Temps moyen
Moyenne
kph
P/W Moyen
Distance km
Piste: Circuit de Chambley
Localisation: Grand Est, France
Longueur km: 3.3
Tours: 17
Temps moyen: 2:01.7
Moyenne kph: 102
P/W Moyen: 0.31
Distance: 134.8
Piste: Circuit de Chenevières
Localisation: Chenevières, France
Longueur km: 3.49
Tours: 5
Temps moyen: 1:47.5
Moyenne kph: 120
P/W Moyen: 0.37
Distance: 135.3
Piste: Hockenheimring
Localisation: Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Longueur km: 4.57
Tours: 201
Temps moyen: 2:00.5
Moyenne kph: 141
P/W Moyen: 0.31
Distance: 183.9
Piste: Circuit de Mirecourt - Juvaincourt
Localisation: Juvaincourt, France
Longueur km: 3.75
Tours: 24
Temps moyen: 1:47.6
Moyenne kph: 126
P/W Moyen: 0.24
Distance: 196
Piste: Nürburgring
Localisation: Nürburg, Germany
Longueur km: 19.15
Tours: 498
Temps moyen: 7:52.2
Moyenne kph: 146
P/W Moyen: 0.26
Distance: 196.8
Piste: Mendig AFB Circuit
Localisation: Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Longueur km: 4.18
Tours: 66
Temps moyen: 1:53.3
Moyenne kph: 133
P/W Moyen: 0.29
Distance: 205.9
Piste: Anneau du Rhin
Localisation: Grand Est, France
Longueur km: 3.69
Tours: 54
Temps moyen: 1:40
Moyenne kph: 134
P/W Moyen: 0.26
Distance: 235.8
Piste: Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps
Localisation: Wallonia, Belgium
Longueur km: 7
Tours: 450
Temps moyen: 2:51.2
Moyenne kph: 150
P/W Moyen: 0.31
Distance: 245.6
Piste: Circuit Jules Tacheny Mettet
Localisation: Wallonia, Belgium
Longueur km: 2.32
Tours: 100
Temps moyen: 1:14.4
Moyenne kph: 112
P/W Moyen: 0.29
Distance: 331.6
Piste: Circuit de Chimay
Localisation: Fosses-la-Ville, Belgium
Longueur km: 4.52
Tours: 1
Temps moyen: 1:51.1
Moyenne kph: 158
P/W Moyen: -
Distance: 337.3

Organisations

Avon

Fabricant

Bugatti

Fabricant

Opel

Fabricant

Pilotes

Lasco001

HJ-F80

Gian Vito Conigliaro

Sylvain PGY

Pilote amateur, passionné de sport auto. 308 GTI 270 d'origine => Nordschleife

206 S16 préparé : Circuit dans l'est de la France

Ricket4Ride

Aurel88

RaddNorr

Dans ma Benz Benz Benz

Michael Krumm

Michael Krumm is a German professional racing driver who won the 2011 FIA GT1 World Championship driving for JR Motorsports

Pregi27

Trackday Event Manager and Head Instructor at PARAGRAPH5 

BMW M2 Competition build by 24/7 Performance

Commentaires

Signaler les données erronées
© 2025 LapMeta, LLC
Règles Conditions d'utilisation Politique de confidentialité Organisations Locale Blog
Signaler les données erronées