Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit

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Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Notes

The Canadian Tire Motorsport Park is an FIA Grade 2 raceway complex located 20 km inland from Bowmanville, at the northern shore of Lake Ontario, Canada.  Highly prestigious events like the Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix, the FIM Road Racing World Championship, or several NASCAR and IndyCar Series have earned this facility the motto of being "Canada's Home of Motorsport." The humid continental climate in the Park is under the influence of Lake Ontario, which results in mild Summers, cold Winters, and abundant rainfall throughout the year, making a wet track surface a given in this circuit.


The landscaping around the track is breathtaking, with sections surrounded by pine trees and ample green-grassed run-off areas on both sides. The road course allows an easy flow of racing vehicles, as most of the trajectory consists of fast-paced sweepers seamlessly merged with the undulating topography of the field. The Canadian Tire Motorsport Park has a remarkable average speed of 96 mph (154 km/h), with top speeds around 160 mph (257 km/h) in several sections, showing this is a raceway designed for speed lovers. Constant elevation changes create blind spots, and overtaking opportunities are abundant through the whole race track.  

Grand Prix Circuit Notes

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park's Grand Prix Circuit delivers 3.957 kilometers through 10 turns representing the facility's original 1961 layout largely unchanged across six decades, located north of Bowmanville in Clarington, Ontario, 75 kilometers east of Toronto. This counterclockwise configuration emphasizes dramatic elevation changes and high-speed sweeping corners including the famous Turn 2 (now called Moss Corner after Sir Stirling Moss suggested changing the proposed single-radius corner into a combination), creating Canada's most demanding natural-terrain road racing challenge where mistakes cost significant time across the facility's 13-meter-wide surface repaved to FIA specifications in 2001. The Grand Prix Circuit's preservation of original 1961 geometry demonstrates timeless design where Turn 1, Clayton Corner (Turn 2/Moss Corner), and Quebec Corner's sweeping right-left-right opening sequence establishes lap rhythm unchanged since facility's inaugural Canadian Grand Prix attracted 35,000 spectators to witness Stirling Moss's Cooper victory.

The Grand Prix Circuit's character derives from elevation transitions and high-speed commitment requirements absent from flat-terrain circuits. The 10-turn layout combines long sweeping corners testing sustained G-loading and aerodynamic efficiency with dramatic elevation drops and climbs that mask corner entries and exits throughout the lap, punishing memorization gaps and rewarding track knowledge developed across repeated sessions. Turn 5's downhill plunge into off-camber exit particularly challenges setup compromise between high-speed stability and low-speed grip needs. Ontario's continental climate creates dramatic seasonal variation from summer heat to potential snow affecting spring and fall events, though the facility operates primarily May-October during Canadian racing season. The 2001 complete repaving to 13-meter width and FIA specifications modernized surface quality while maintaining original geometry, enabling Formula 1 consideration though F1 never returned after 1977 Canadian Grand Prix moved permanently to Montreal. IMSA, NASCAR Pinty's Series, Canadian Superbike Championship, and various club racing organizations utilize Mosport GP as Ontario's premier road racing venue. The configuration particularly showcases how 1960s natural-terrain design philosophy created enduring layout, where following landscape contours rather than bulldozing flat produced elevation-intensive character remaining competitive six decades later across Canada's most historic road racing facility.

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Direction
Clockwise
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Uploaded Laps
106
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Length
4.1 km
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Vertical Gain
72 m
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Turns
10
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Average Speed
158 kph
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Average Lap Time
1:33.6
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Power to Weight Average
0.22
sports_motorsports Driver Name: Questar
Lap Time: 1:26.000
speed vs Predict: -2.97s
Elevation Profile
S
Krispy Chevrolet Camaro6 SS 1LE
7,699
S
Eedo123 Chevrolet Camaro6 ZL1
S
Jeff R. Porsche 981 Cayman S
SM
Questar Chevrolet Corvette C7 Z06
SM
LouiC6z Chevrolet Corvette C6 Z06
5,907
SM
Krispy Chevrolet Camaro6 SS 1LE
7,699
P
YouTube Channel Chevrolet Corvette C8 Z06
P
Questar Chevrolet Corvette C7 Z06
SC
Ron Fellows Chevrolet Corvette C8 ZR1
SC
YouTube Channel Chevrolet Corvette C8 Z06
SC
RedPrsch Porsche 992.1 GT3 RS
L
LouiC6z Chevrolet Corvette C6 Z06
5,907
L
Marcello Chevrolet Corvette C6
L
3GFX Chevrolet Corvette C5 Z06
6,419
G
PZ Tuning Honda Civic Si Coupe FG2
G
Erik Hjortshoj Porsche 987.1 Cayman S

Other Variations

Track Turns Length km Laps Avg Time Avg kph P/W Avg
Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport (DDT 1 Kink) 15 2.29 12 1:32.3 89 0.24
Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport (DDT 2 Kink) 17 2.29 30 1:39.6 83 0.18

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit is 4.1 km, 10 turns, clockwise. Fastest recorded lap: 1:16.900 (Nissan 350Z 2003 (Kels)).

Frequently asked questions

How long is Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit?

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit is 4.1 km (2.5 mi) long.

How many turns does Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit have?

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit has 10 turns.

Which direction does Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit run?

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit runs clockwise.

What is the lap record at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit?

The fastest recorded lap at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park-Mosport Grand Prix Circuit is 1:16.900 in a Nissan 350Z 2003 (Kels).

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