Looking ahead at next weekend, I came across some cool bits about the Nordschleife that I thought would interest my fellow tumblrinas (gn)
Basics
The Nürburgring is the longest, permanent, dedicated racing track in the world at 20.8km (12.9 miles) long. It used to be even longer but was reconfigured for safety in the 70s following Niki Lauda’s horrible crash in 1976
It is located in the Eifel region in western Germany
Construction started in 1925 around a little town called Nürburg. Not to be confused with Nürnberg (Nuremberg) in the south of Germany (that’s a 4-hour drive)
A design competition was held to decide where and how to build it. The winning idea was to build it around the 860-year-old Nürburg, a castle first built in 1166. You can see its crumbling ruins in the background during the race weekend.
Moody! The track is in the middle of the Eifel mountain range which has its own micro-climate. It's colder and wetter than surrounding areas, with high rainfall and frequent fog. This leads to oftentimes tricky conditions when races are held, just like yesterday when they cancelled NLS1 - the season kick-off - cause the track looked like this (picture courtesy of @thissying):
Lots of rain = lots of green hence why Jackie Stewart nicknamed it 'Green Hell' following his victory at the 1968 German Grand Prix despite extremely wet and foggy conditions.
Visibility is so pathetically poor I can't even see Chris' car in front of me [...] I am simply driving into this great wall of spray. I pull out to pass him but the spray is dense and I'm driving blind. — Jackie Stewart, Winning Is Not Enough
Nürburgring or Nordschleife?
Nürburgring describes the whole complex, made up of multiple sub-tracks. These have changed over the years, so below is a whistle-stop rundown.
Initially, in the 1920s, the ring consisted of two parts - the northern loop Nordschleife and the southern loop, Südschleife.
They could be used separately or driven together. North and south added up to the aforementioned 28km long track. The southern part was considered more dangerous because trees lined the edge of the track very closely.
That doesn't say much, even the northern part had a reputation of being extremely dangerous. F1 races were held there from the late 1920s until the 70s. As F1 cars evolved, it became more and more dangerous to drive them at this track. Measures to make racing safer included the addition of a chicane to reduce speeds, removal of bumps and installation of armco barriers (before they only had hedges ?!?). By the 1970s, the German Grand Prix required 5x the marshals and medical staff as a typical F1 race.
After Lauda's crash, a decision was made to construct an entirely new, much safer Grand Prix circuit to host F1 and the southern loop, Südschleife, was demolished as a result to make space for the new circuit.
Current layout
Today, we have two circuits: Nürburgring Nordschleife and the Nürburgring GP track.
Nürburgring Nordschleife
21km long, 73 corners (though people fight about which kinks and corners to count so there's differing opinions on this)
300m of elevation change throughout the lap
Open to the public almost daily (yes, you can drive your normal road car here, you'll need follow German highway code, no overtaking on the right, left only)
Nürburgring GP Track (F1 track)
5km long
adheres to modern FIA standards
Max actually holds the lap record there: 1:28.139 for his lap in the RB16 at the 2020 Eifel GP
Nürburgring Gesamtstrecke (Combined circuit)
25-27km long depending which version of the GP track is used
a combination of both the Nordschleife and GP track
used for the 24-hour race and the NLS
Famous sections with cutesy names for insane pieces of road:
🎠 Caracciola Karussell (carousel)
a banked turn that’s over 180 degrees around
the banking is very steep
this turn used to be driven on the flat tarmac on the outside until Rudolph Caracciola put two wheels in the ditch and realised he could take the corner much faster that way
Kevin Estre, Nürburgring 24h winner, says you can take the banking 30 to 40km/h faster than the outside line in a GT3 car
drivers will experience about 2G doing that
🦊 Fuchsröhre (fox hole)
The corner is named after a fox that hid in a drainage pipe during construction
one of the fastest and most dangerous parts of the lap because of the extremely high speeds in such a tight and confined place
🤏 Brünnchen (small well)
fan favourite vantage point
two right-hand corners and a very short straight with lots of up and down
this section used to have a sudden drop-off that caused cars to take flight
🪴 Pflanzgarten (plant garden/nursery)
used to be the site of gardens of the Earls of Nürburg
one of the fastest and most difficult sections of the ring and full of jumps
cars can go fully airborne here
🪶 Schwalbenschwanz/Kleines Karussell (swallow's tail/little carousel)
construction workers coined this name because the section looks like a swallow's tail from above
a sequence of very fast sweepers followed by:
Kleines Karussell, which is similar to its big brother carousel, except that it is only a 90-degree corner
during race weekends, the camp site is inside the turn
Sidenote: The Nürburgring is host to a music festival every summer, Rock am Ring. This year the sold out weekend will feature Linkin Park, Papa Roach and Baby Metal.
Funnest fact: You can get married at the ring with sights on the start/finish straight, though all dates for this year are booked up. Kimi, you know what to do












