Those BTCC records are all post super touring records. I think the super tourers were a couple of seconds faster than todays cars looking at the records here http://touring-cars.co.uk/results/1998/index.php
The 1998 pole in Macao was a 2.29.341
The 2010 pole in Macao was a 2:31.321
Well the 1998 time was on some German page I don't trust, but don't forget that 2001 there was a FIA European Cup with Supertouringcars (also organised by Mr. Lotti and Eurosport) and the results are on the old ETCC page, wich is still available under http://www.fiatouringcars.com/
Monza Pole in 2001 Gabriele Tarquini (JAS Engineering Italia IP / Honda Accord) 1:54.676
Monza Pole in 2005 Dirk Müller (Schnitzer / BMW 320si) 1:59.009 *alltime S2000 record*
Monza Pole in 2011 Robert Huff (Team Chevrolet / Chevrolet Cruze 1.6T) 1:59.034
Monza Fastest Lap in 2001 Gabriele Tarquini (JAS Engineering Italia IP / Honda Accord) 1:55.770
Monza Fastest Lap in 2005 Jörg Müller (Schnitzer / BMW 320si) 1:59.058 *alltime S2000 record*
Monza Fastest Lap in 2011 Yvan Muller (Team Chevrolet / Chevrolet Cruze 1.6T) 1:59.355
There was also Brno, but it rained in 2001. Hungaroring was modified meanwhile, so was Zolder, which means Monza is the only compareable track.
It is for WTCC. Meanwhile, most of the BTCC field is running is running on the "new" 2 liters turbo NGTC engine. The most notable exceptions are Chevrolet and BMW, which I belive are still running 2 liters, normally aspirated engines.
11 March - Monza, Italy
1 April - Valencia, Spain
15 April - Donington Park, UK
29 April - TBA, Germany OR Salzburgring, Austria
6 May - Budapest, Hungary
20 May - Marrakech, Morocco
10 June - Porto, Portugal
22 July - Curitiba, Brazil
23 September - Infineon Raceway Sonoma, USA
21 October - Suzuka, Japan
4 November - Shanghai International Circuit, China, OR Tianma International Circuit
18 November - Guia Circuit, Macau
only the Suzuka race is a confirmed date. 6 events collide with F1 events, but they are always in a different timezone. Oschersleben confirmed they will not host a WTCC event in 2012. The track manager does not expect any other German track to jump in and host the German round. The Salzburgring will be the backup track. Should the ETCC return to the Salzburgring, they might feeder the WTCC round due to enviromental protection laws and the resulting limitation for motorsport events on Austrian tracks. Also, due to a cooperation between the WTCC and the Chinese Touring Car Championship (CTCC), the WTCC moved to Shanghai for the Chinese race. It still needs to be decided where the race will take place, on the F1 track, the Shanghai International Circuit, or the Tianma International Circuit which is a regular CTCC track. The Brazilian round will again take place at the Autodromo Internatcional de Curitiba, although it was reported earlier this year that it would be moved to Interlagos. The circuito da Boavista sees it's first world championship race in back to back years. Marrakesh gets another chance and Budapest now subsitutes Brno.
Well it is deemed safe enough by the FIA. It has got an FIA Grade 3 License. (Grade 5 is Formula 1 Race, Grade 4+ is Formula 1 Test, Grade 4 Tracks for any World Championship Race, Grade 3 Tracks for WTCC and any international race, please correct me if I'm wrong!!!)
Anyone wants to go to Budapest next year? The promoters announced, that it will be entrance free No Hungarian forint to pay
EDIT: There is a chance, that there will be a Peugeot 308 in Shanghai and Macau. The car was entered in the STCC. If it fulfills the WTCC rules, they might be racing.
There is a difference between national (STCC) and international (WTCC) homulogations. I doubt there will be a problem. As you mentioned STCC but they need to check the 308 into every detail.
After cancellation of Brno, at least this is some great news for me! I am really thinking about it, however it's kinda far away right now. Don't forget to remind me next year 2 weeks before Hungaroring, please.
Could you get me some free seats in his BMW, please? I am former LFS'er with 3 years of practice so "shock-o-meter-to-maximum" from my laptimes is guaranteed.
So... Menu showing that he still has what it takes, with a gutsy move on Muller for the race 1 win. Engstler breaking the Chevy domination with a flag to flag race 2 win. Volvo showing mighty pace, but running out of luck again. O'Young going from race 2 pole to T1 gravel trap thanks to Tarquini. Arai showing his rallying experience, and Muller reminding everyone he is a former ice racing champion.
Eventful event overall, although the track doesn't seem to be suiting the touring cars so well. Too few overtaking opportunities. Too bad they're not taking the GP track here; could be quite interresting to see everyone would cope with Degner, Spoon and 130R.