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==Current season==
==Current season==


===Drivers===  
===Entries===  
{| class="wikitable"
 
{|class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:85%"
|+{{nowrap|2024 Formula Elite World Championship constructors and drivers}}
!scope="col" rowspan="2" nowrap|Constructor
! rowspan="2" class="unsortable"|Chassis
!scope="col" rowspan="2" nowrap|Power unit
! colspan="3" scope="col" class="unsortable" nowrap |Drivers
|-
|-
! Driver !! Abbr. !! ## !! Origin
| {{flagicon|Pulacan}} [[Butale Automobile Works|Butale Team Ozeros]]
| TCT C2
| Celer
| {{ubl|
|95 {{flagicon|Onekawa-Nukanoa}} Āpirana Tipene
|69 {{flagicon|Pulacan}} Puso Ramotswe}}
|-
|-
| Franchesca Africani || AFR || 44 || {{flagicon|Tyreseia}}
| {{flagicon|Latium}} Celer Motorsports FE Team
| Celer F2024
| Celer
| {{ubl|
|80 {{flagicon|Kembesa}} Geb Teklemariami
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|-
|-
| Hun Hunapu || HUN || 33 || {{flagicon|Mutul}}
| {{flagicon|Sante Reze}} [[Inizatun k'Rossi|House k'Rossi FE Racing Team]]
| HkR 11
| [[Muwan_5_Manich|M5M]]
| {{ubl|
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #1
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|-
|-
| Kai Ludwig || LUD || 77 || {{flagicon|Rökkurlynd}}
| {{flagicon|Tsurushima}} Kaisan Sport FE Team
| KS T.24
| Takasaki
| {{ubl|
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #1
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|-
|-
| Kimi Hisakawa || KIM || 37 || {{flagicon|Tsurushima}}
| {{flagicon|Gristol-Serkonos}} Marklin-Ashton Racing
| MAR 2024
| [[Svaartaron Auto Works|Svaartaron]]
| {{ubl|
|77 {{flagicon|Rökkurlynd}} Kai Ludwig
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|-
|-
| Puso Ramotswe || RAM || 69 || {{flagicon|Pulacan}}
| {{flagicon|Mutul}} [[Muwan_5_Manich#Motorsports|Muman Racing]]
| M27
| [[Muwan_5_Manich|M5M]]
| {{ubl|
|33 {{flagicon|Mutul}} Hun Hunapu
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|-
|-
| Geb Teklemariami || TEK || 80 || {{flagicon|Kembesa}}
| {{flagicon|Tsurushima}} Panatechnics Takasaki FE Team
| PTT Type 40
| Takasaki
| {{ubl|
|37 {{flagicon|Tsurushima}} Kimi Hisakawa
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|-
|-
| Āpirana Tipene || TIP || 95 || {{flagicon|Onekawa-Nukanoa}}
| [[File:Rubric Coast Partnership Flag.png|23px]] Rubric Coast Racing Union
| RCR 44
| [[Svaartaron Auto Works|Svaartaron]]
| {{ubl|
|20 {{flagicon|Talahara}} Zira Yufitarin
|44 {{flagicon|Tyreseia}} Franchesca Africani}}
|-
|-
| Zira Yufitarin || YUF || 20 || {{flagicon|Talahara}}
| {{flagicon|Ottonia}} [[Svaartaron_Auto_Works#Racing_and_Sporting|Svaartaron Racing Workshop]]
| SRWC 4000
| [[Svaartaron Auto Works|Svaartaron]]
| {{ubl|
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #1
|## {{flagicon|Talahara}} Driver #2}}
|}
|}



Revision as of 04:10, 8 January 2024

Formula Elite
Euskotren FE.svg
CategoryOpen-wheel racing
RegionInternational
Drivers' championMutul Hun Hunapu

Formula Elite (FE) is an international open-wheel racing motorsports championship. It is the highest-level competition sanctioned by the World Automotive Sports Union and is widely considered among the world's premier racing series. Racers are challenged with as many as 20 events across six continents.

FE is a single-championship series: that there is no separate championship for drivers and teams. Teams ultimately exist to support their drivers; whose placings in the final rankings determine the teams' prize awards at the end of a season. The entry barrier to the sport is extremely high, with travel costs, manufacturing capabilities, and high talent standards While a number of privateer racing teams continue to participate, subsisting off of their prize money every year, the majority of drivers and teams rely on corporate or national sponsorships to operate. In addition, drivers must first qualify for a World Automotive Sports Union champion's license by achieving a threshold number of points in feeder disciplines in order to be eligible for the FE series.

History

Formula Elite was founded in 1980 as a project of the World Automotive Sports Union (WASU). WASU is an organization that was formed to regulate motorsports series in the wake of the 1962 Chueco Endurance Race disaster which resulted in the fatalities of two drivers and 80 spectators along with serious injuries to 116 others. In the years and decades that followed the disaster, WASU's sanctioning authority expanded over various series and driving formulas worldwide, gathering broad recognition as the preeminent motorsports regulator.

1980 FE series open-wheel circuit racecar

In 1975, the then-president of WASU, Yunus Emre, proposed the formation of an ultimate open-wheel championship series drawing from the top level of competition from the various disciplines under the sanction of WASU. The initial proposal of what would eventually become FE was less a series and a system of assigning points for existing races run under different formulas. Significant changes were brought about as the concept was developed, particularly with an eye toward profitability and sustainability which drove the decisions to expand the event from effectively an independent scoring system into a full series and to introduce a new formula, intended to create the fastest possible cars within reasonable safety parameters.

On February 4, 1977, Formula Elite was publically unveiled with the inaugural season set to begin in March 1979. The announcement was not received enthusiastically by all parties, however. Other formula racing series launched a legal challenge against WASU, arguing that the regulatory body had breached a duty of care toward the regional series by entering into direct competition with them. The court battle delayed the inaugural season by a year to 1980 but was ultimately settled. Most of the terms of the settlement remain undisclosed, but several alterations to the FE series were conceded, including the requirement to obtain points in feeder series for eligibility to participate in FE.

Format

Qualification

Races

Organization

Governance

Feeder series

Entry

Rules

Strategies

Technology

Revenue

Current season

Entries

2024 Formula Elite World Championship constructors and drivers
Constructor Chassis Power unit Drivers
Pulacan Butale Team Ozeros TCT C2 Celer
  • 95 Onekawa-Nukanoa Āpirana Tipene
  • 69 Pulacan Puso Ramotswe
Latium Celer Motorsports FE Team Celer F2024 Celer
  • 80 Kembesa Geb Teklemariami
  • ## Talahara Driver #2
Sante Reze House k'Rossi FE Racing Team HkR 11 M5M
  • ## Talahara Driver #1
  • ## Talahara Driver #2
Tsurushima Kaisan Sport FE Team KS T.24 Takasaki
  • ## Talahara Driver #1
  • ## Talahara Driver #2
Gristol-Serkonos Marklin-Ashton Racing MAR 2024 Svaartaron
  • 77 Rökkurlynd Kai Ludwig
  • ## Talahara Driver #2
Mutul Muman Racing M27 M5M
  • 33 Mutul Hun Hunapu
  • ## Talahara Driver #2
Tsurushima Panatechnics Takasaki FE Team PTT Type 40 Takasaki
  • 37 Tsurushima Kimi Hisakawa
  • ## Talahara Driver #2
Rubric Coast Partnership Flag.png Rubric Coast Racing Union RCR 44 Svaartaron
  • 20 Talahara Zira Yufitarin
  • 44 Tyreseia Franchesca Africani
Ottonia Svaartaron Racing Workshop SRWC 4000 Svaartaron
  • ## Talahara Driver #1
  • ## Talahara Driver #2

Calendar

Standings