European KF1 Championship
The European KF1 Championship is a kart racing competition organised by the CIK-FIA.
This class used to be called Formula A and has changed since January 2007 when CIK-FIA decided to replace the 100 cc water-cooled two-stroke engines with 125 cc Touch-and-Go (TaG) water-cooled two-stroke engines (KF type). [1]
KF1 is the top level of karting. It is open to the best drivers aged 15 and up.
European Champions KF1
| Season | Driver | Chassis | Engine | Tyres | Report |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | CRG | Parilla | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2001 | Gillard | Parilla | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2002 | Mach 1 | KZH | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2003 | Swiss Hutless | Vortex | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2004 | Gillard | Parilla | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2005 | Tony Kart | Vortex | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2006 | Tony Kart | Vortex | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2007 | Tony Kart | Vortex | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2008 | Tony Kart | Vortex | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2009 | Maranello | Maxter | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2010 | |||||
| 2011 | Intrepid | TM | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2012 | ART GP | Parilla | Vega | Report | |
| 2013 | CRG | TM | Vega | Report | |
| 2014 | Zanardi | Parilla | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2015 | Mad-Croc | TM | Vega | Report | |
| 2016 | CRG | Parilla | Vega | Report | |
| 2017 | FA Kart | Vortex | LeCont | Report | |
| 2018 | Kart Republic | Parilla | Bridgestone | Report | |
| 2019 | Kart Republic | Parilla | LeCont | Report | |
| 2020 | Kart Republic | Parilla | LeCont | Report |
References
- "The CIK-FIA Categories". May 2013.
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