2006 Formula 3 Euro Series
The 2006 Formula 3 Euro Series season was the fourth championship year of Europe’s premier Formula Three series. As in previous years, there were ten rounds – each with two races – held at a variety of European circuits. Each weekend consisted of one 60-minute practice session and one qualifying session, followed by one c.110 km race and one c.80 km race. In a revised qualifying system that used only one session, the starting order for race 2 was determined by the finishing order of race 1, with the top eight positions reversed.
Summary
2006 saw the Euro Series make its debut at three venues: Brands Hatch in the UK, the Circuit de Catalunya near Barcelona in Spain, and Le Mans. This was the first time that rounds had been held in Britain and Spain.A number of regulatory changes took place prior to the 2006 season. Mid-season testing was heavily restricted to a maximum of 10 days per driver/car, with no testing at race venues, leaving teams and drivers to make the most of the race weekend test sessions. The qualifying session for race 2 was dropped in favour of a result-based reverse grid system. The finishing order of race 1 decided the grid for race 2, with the top eight finishers reversed. Chassis specifications of between two and four years old were permitted for the first time, with the creation of the Drivers' Trophy title. Eligibility for this award was restricted to drivers who were not more than 22 years old.
After Lewis Hamilton's domination of the 2005 season, the 2006 championship battle was considerably closer. The title was won by Scotsman Paul di Resta, who ended the year 11 points ahead of Germany's Sebastian Vettel. For much of the season, di Resta and Vettel were exchanging the points lead, but the German's focus wavered towards the end of the year. BMW-Sauber's motorsport director Mario Theissen attributed this to the busy schedule that Vettel undertook as his team's test driver in the last three Grands Prix of the 2006 F1 season. Other drivers worthy of note included Kamui Kobayashi, who finished on the podium twice on the way to winning the Rookie Cup, and race winner Kazuki Nakajima, whose performances attracted a testing contract with Williams.
Not surprisingly, the two main championship contenders were team-mates at ASM Formule 3, the French-based team that has dominated the Euro Series for the last three seasons with three Drivers' and Teams' Championship titles in succession. 2006 saw another improvement in form from Manor Motorsport – a former multiple champion team in British F3. With Japan's Kohei Hirate and the experienced Esteban Guerrieri, it was frequently ASM's closest challenger and finished 2nd in the Teams' Championship standings. This year, Manor was no longer the sole British team in the Euroseries – it was joined by entries from Hitech Racing and Fortec Motorsport at Hockenheim and Brands Hatch.
With only one race win for an Opel-powered car – from a reverse-grid pole position – it was another season of domination by the HWA-built Mercedes engine. Dallara was the de facto sole supplier of chassis, with the Signature SLC project on indefinite hold and the Mygale chassis still yet to race in this series.
Teams and drivers
Driver changes
; Changed Teams- Richard Antinucci: Team Midland Euroseries → HBR Motosport
- Giedo van der Garde: Team Rosberg → ASM Formule 3
- Esteban Guerrieri: Team Midland Euroseries → Manor Motosport
- Kohei Hirate: Team Rosberg → Manor Motosport
- Paul di Resta: Manor Motorsport → ASM Formule 3
- Sebastian Vettel: Mücke Motorsport → ASM Formule 3
- Richard Antinucci: All-Japan Formula Three Championship → HBR Motorsport
- Récardo Bruins Choi: Formula Renault 2.0 Germany & Formula Renault 2.0 Netherlands → van Amersfoort Racing
- Sébastien Buemi: Formula BMW ADAC → ASL Mücke Motorsport
- Yelmer Buurman: Formula Renault 2.0 UK → Fortec Motorsport
- Peter Elkmann: Recaro Formel 3 Cup → Jo Zeller Racing
- Natacha Gachnang: Formula BMW ADAC → Bordoli Motorsport
- Romain Grosjean: Championnat de France Formula Renault 2.0 & Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 → Signature-Plus
- Michael Herck: British Formula 3 Championship & Austria Formula 3 Cup → Bas Leinders Junior Racing Team
- James Jakes: Formula Renault 2.0 UK → Hitech Racing
- Charlie Kimball: British Formula 3 Championship → Signature-Plus
- Kamui Kobayashi: Formula Renault 2.0 Italy & Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 → ASM Formule 3
- Dominick Muermans: Formula Renault 2.0 Germany & Formula Renault 2.0 Netherlands → van Amersfoort Racing
- Kazuki Nakajima: All-Japan Formula Three Championship → Manor Motorsport
- Paolo Maria Nocera: Italian Formula Three Championship → Prema Powerteam
- Ronayne O'Mahony: British Formula 3 Championship → Prema Powerteam
- Filip Salaquarda: Recaro Formel 3 Cup → Team I.S.R.
- Tim Sandtler: Formula BMW ADAC → Signature Plus
- Roberto Streit: All-Japan Formula Three Championship → Prema Powerteam
- Jonathan Summerton: Formula BMW ADAC → ASL Mücke Motorsport
- João Urbano: Formula BMW ADAC → Prema Powerteam
- James Walker: British Formula 3 Championship → Hitech Racing
- Julien Abelli: Karting → Janiec Racing Team
- Gina-Maria Adenauer: Toyota Yaris Cup Germany → SMS Seyffarth Motorsport
- Cemil Çipa: Formula 3 Turkey → HBR Motorsport
- Kevin Fank: Recaro Formel 3 Cup Trophy Class → SMS Seyffarth Motorsport
- Bruno Fechner: Formula Renault 2.0 Germany → SMS Seyffarth Motorsport
- Anthony Janiec: French Formula Three Championship Class B → Janiec Racing Team
- Dominik Schraml: Recaro Formel 3 Cup → SMS Seyffarth Motorsport
- Átila Abreu: Mücke Motorsport → StockCar Brasil
- Rob Austin: Team Midland Euroseries → SEAT Cupra Great Britain R class
- Marco Bonanomi: Prema Powerteam → Euroseries 3000 & World Series by Renault
- Fabio Carbone: Signature → All-Japan Formula Three Championship
- Ben Clucas: Team Midland Euroseries → Australian Formula 3
- Loïc Duval: Signature Plus → Formula Nippon & Super GT
- Gregory Franchi: Prema Powerteam → World Series by Renault
- Maximilian Götz: ASM Formule 3 → International Formula Master
- Lucas di Grassi: Manor Motorsport → GP2 Series
- Lewis Hamilton: ASM Formule 3 → GP2 Series
- Thomas Holzer: AM-Holzer Rennsport → Retirement
- Stephen Jelley: Team Midland Euroseries → British Formula 3 Championship
- Paolo Montin: Ombra Racing → Porsche Carrera Cup Italy
- Hannes Neuhauser: HBR Motorsport → Porsche Supercup
- Alejandro Núñez: HBR Motorsport → Prema Powerteam
- Franck Perera: Prema Powerteam → GP2 Series
- James Rossiter: Signature Plus → World Series by Renault
- Adrian Sutil: ASM Formule 3 → All-Japan Formula Three Championship
- Nico Verdonck: Team Midland Euroseries → Spanish Formula Three by Toyota
- Ross Zwolsman: RZ Racing → ATS Formel 3 Cup
- Danny Watts: HBR Motorsport → Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain
Additional participations
In round 5 at the Norisring, F3 rookie Natacha Gachnang of Switzerland drove a second entry for Jo Zeller Racing. She also competed in rounds 6, 9, and 10. In the F3 Masters at Zandvoort, ATS F3 Cup team Van Amersfoort Racing made a one-off appearance with two cars for its Cup regulars, Dominik Muermans and Récardo Bruins Choi.
Calendar
- The series supported the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters at all rounds.
Results
Season standings
Drivers Standings
- Points are awarded as follows:
The effects of the new reverse-grid system – which put the 8th-placed finisher from race 1 on pole for race 2 – can be seen clearly in this chart. 50% of the race 2 pole sitters went on to win, while there was only one double winner and no other race 1 winner even reached the podium in race 2.