All right, Modbaraban continues.
However, White Blue was wrong. Clue: the guy that used plates with SS runes used the number SS-333, was an actual SS member. He was head of Porsche and married in the Nürburg Ring (very appropriate). Won the Mille Miglia. So, White, what's his name?
About the longest track in F1 history, this are the figures:
- Longest GP circuit: Le Mans, 1906, 123186 m.
- Other GP circuits, longer than Nürburgring before WWII that hosted GPs (to answer the question posted):
- Le Mans, 1911-1913, 54313 m
Brno (actually, it was named Masaryk, after the first president of Czechoslovakia, the name changed in the 80's), 1930-1948, 29142 m
Baix Penedés/Tarragona, 1908-1909, 27885 m
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Longest permanent closed course F1 track in history: Interlagos, 1978-1989, 7974 m. Before that, from 1940-1977, 7960m. Nowadays it has 4309 m.
Of course I know that Monza, in the configurations used in 1922-1933, 1955, 1956, 1960 and 1961 was a 10000 m monster, but they used some public roads (park roads, actually).
- Longest
active permanent closed course F1 track: Spa Francorchamps, 6976 m.
- Longest active circuit
approved by FIA: Le Mans, 13650 m.
- Longest race in history: Paris - New York, 1908, 36000 km