February 11, 2026

TITC Rewind – a quick look back on recent moments from the world’s greatest race

In 2003 when the first edition of the Thailand International Touring Car Championship was held no one could have ever imagined what this race would become.  For sure the fact that the first ever 1:10 Electric Touring Car World Champion Surikarn Chaidajsuriya won it as the reigning World Champion brought attention to the race and got it off on the right footing, but over the 20 editions held since it has established itself into one of the races that every great driver of our sport wants to claim.  Like the Monaco Grand Prix, the Indy 500, Le Mans, and the Dakar Rally, are to full size motorsport, the TITC is iconic and one of the most coveted wins there is in Electric Touring Car and RC racing in general.  Manufacturers of all sizes flock to it such is its significance and only an IFMAR World title trumps it in terms of prestige but for that you must wait 2-years between attempts.  For drivers it is not a case of flying out a day or two early to get into the swing of driving around the Infinity RC Addict track in conditions that are always changing due to the Thai heat & humidity.  Drivers pretty much relocated themselves in Bangkok in search of finding that little something that might help them come out victorious at the end of what is officially only a 4-day event, all else going well because it can be a cruel race.  Australian racer Michael Stone made his TITC debut last year and asking him on our arrival to cover the 2025 action how he was finding the experience his reply summed it up perfectly, ‘I am coming for longer next year.’  The race hadn’t even officially started at that stage but it highlights the unique atmosphere that you have to actually experience to truly appreciate.  On the eve of the official action getting underway and the 22nd edition attracting the greatest media attention the TITC has ever seen, including its first proper livestream production by our friends RC Race Media, we want to rewind a little and take a look back at some of the more recent editions of the TITC as we look forward to telling the story of our sixth TITC.

While we had been to RC Addict in 2012 to witness Thai driver Meen Vejrak become the IFMAR Nitro Touring Car World Champion ahead of Atsushi Hara and Francesco Tironi, our first TITC would be in 2017.  Bruno Coelho had won the race for the first time a year earlier and he was to successfully defended that title but only after what he described at the time as the ‘hardest win’ of his career.  Qualifying would see Jilles Groskamp take the opening two qualifiers with Coelho taking the next two leaving it all to play for in Q5, but on the limit & under pressure from Coelho who had a really strong car for that round, Groskamp made a mistake and crashed out allowing Coelho to secure the TQ.  In A1 Coelho took an easy win as a frantic battle took place for second with the Yokomo of Nicolas Lee coming out on top.  Coelho would however make a mistake in A2 and crash out with team-mate Alexander Hagberg also having an error, with both incidents delaying Groskamp.  This allowed Lee to take the win meaning it was all up for grabs in A3.  While Groskamp was no longer a title contender, he put huge pressure on Coelho and contact between them would allow the Yokomo of Ronald Volker to go to the front for the win but Coelho still needed the second in order to beat Lee for the overall on tie-break.  He did it but admitted he didn’t enjoy the level of pressure he was under for the 2nd place.  Lee was frustrated he backed off to protect his lead in A2 as it ultimately cost him a TITC title.  Volker completed the podium ahead of Groskamp.  Interestingly Marc Rheinard made his debut for Infinity at the 2017 edition but it proved a challenging few days and he ended up qualifying in the B-Main!  After of our first TITC experience we had caught the bug and were the race’s newest fan recruits.

Back for more in 2018, we would witness Akio Sobue win spectacularly by 3/1000ths of a second.  While defending champion Coelho secured the TQ, the battle for the win would be between Sobue and Hagberg, with a win a piece, and Rheinard after Coelho crashed out of title contention in A2.  Hagberg needed the A3 win, Sobue having the advantage of the faster winning time.  Starting second behind Coelho, his team-mate opened the door to put Hagberg where he needed to be.  With Naoto Matsukura and Coelho clashing at the next corner, Sobue and Rheinard now made up the Top 3, the stage set for the 3-way showdown.  After an initial challenge on Hagberg, Sobue dropped back with Hagberg looking like Xray was going to retain the title but over the final 3-laps the race came alive again as the Japanese driver reeled in the leader.  On the last run through the sweeper, Sobue went for a pass getting out of shape in the process before attempting a pass on the inside of the Swede and there was contact, both cars spinning out.  With Hagberg resuming in the lead, with a bigger gap than before the contact, it looked as though the race was decided with three turns to go, but Sobue wasn’t conceding that easily and launching his car at the finish line managed the perfect line to snatch a win by 0.003 of a second that left everyone in amazement.  Behind, 2012 Champion Vejrak crossed the line third securing the final step on the podium ahead of Rheinard.

While we set-off on our first flight for what should have been our third consecutive TITC in 2019, it all came to an abrupt stop when we reached Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam.  Pakistan had closed its airspace due to missile strikes and this caused complete travel chaos.  The alternative routes offered would have only got us to Bangkok just in time for the Sunday finals with that option including an overnight stay in Russia!  Unfortunately we would miss seeing Hagberg make up for missing out by a hair’s length a year earlier.  Securing the TQ, he fended off Sobue in A1 and Naoto Matsukura in A2 to claim his second TITC win having previously won in 2015.

2020 would be the year Sobue became a repeat winner giving Infinity title number 2 but that trip will probably be best remembered as the last big race before our world changed forever.  At the time Xray, staunch supporters of the TITC each year, made the decision not to travel to Thailand due to health concerns over a virus outbreak in Asia.  Rheinard and Ronald Volker also opted to not travel for that reason.  While big names were absent, Sobue took a perfectly executed victory in an all Infinity podium that saw Jilles Groskamp finish runner-up and Naoto Matsukura third.  Little did we know that within 2-weeks of Sobue’s win the world would start to shutdown due to the Corona Virus.

Having been forced to go two years without a TITC due to Covid, on the race’s return in 2023 it was Coelho who put the race back on the international stage with a perfect weekend.  From the TQ Coelho wrapped up his 3rd TITC win ahead of the outgoing Champion Sobue and Ishioka Hayato.  The win made Xray the race’s most winning manufacturer.

Having to wait until 2024 to make our post Covid return, we would witness a great drive from Mugen Seiki’s Ronald Volker, the resurgent 2016 World Champion securing the TQ honours ahead of the defending champion Coelho but the finals that followed would divide fans across the globe.  With Volker leading A1, Coelho would tangle with the German handing Rheinard the win.  A2 would be a repeat scenario, this time Hagberg the benefactor.  Having witnessed many racing incidents over the 20 years Red RC has been online, and for many years joked with Volker that he is one of the most PC drivers on the world tour, the frustration of those two incidents exploded out of him that day.  In A3 his weekend wouldn’t get any better and he would spin out of the lead on his own handing Coelho the leg and a record equalling fourth win.  Hagberg and Rheinard completed the podium with P6 not any reflection of how on form Volker was that year a decade after his only TITC win.

As used in our main headline for last year’s 21st running of the TITC, the Rookie came and the Rookie conquered, after a number of year’s of other class commitments preventing him from attending, Michal Orlowski showed up in style.  Completing a clean sweep of all four rounds of qualifying, he was untouchable and winning A1 & 2 gave Schumacher their first TITC win to see them become the sixth different manufacturers to do so.  2025 also marked the race debut of Bruno Coelho for Infinity.  Chasing three in a row, having a year earlier claimed Xray’s 8th win and matched the all time winning record of Hara, the World Champion wouldn’t quite pull off the fairy tale debut with Infinity but second wasn’t a bad way to begin his new adventure with the Japanese manufacturer that has only gotten a lot stronger over the 12-months since.  The result however was very nearly a third place as we witnessed a flash of pure Marc Rheinard greatest as he made a last lap pass on his great rival but with a better line at the final corner Coelho just beat the Awesomatix to the loop.

With 11 different drivers having gotten to raise the TITC winning trophy above their head, 6 of them on more than one occasion, will 2026 see a new name emerge or will we witness Coelho becoming the TITC’s most successful driver.  Thanks to Cayote and Gens ace we will spend the next four days at RC Addict following how the action unfolds.

TITC Roll of Honour

2025 – Michał Orłowski (Schumacher)
2024 – Bruno Coelho (Xray)
2023 – Bruno Coelho (Xray)
2022 – Cancelled due to Covid
2021 – Cancelled due to Covid
2020 – Akio Sobue (Infinity)
2019 – Alexander Hagberg (Xray)
2018 – Akio Sobue (Infinity)
2017 – Bruno Coehlo (Xray)
2016 – Bruno Coelho (Xray)
2015 – Alexander Hagberg (Xray)
2014 – Ronald Volker (Yokomo)
2013 – Atsushi Hara (Hot Bodies)
2012 – Meen Vejrak (Xray)
2011 – Andy Moore (Hot Bodies)
2010 – Atsushi Hara (Hot Bodies)
2009 – Atsushi Hara (Hot Bodies)
2008 – Teemu Leino (Xray)
2007 – Andy Moore (Hot Bodies)
2006 – Marc Rheinard (Tamiya)
2005 – Atsushi Hara (Hot Bodies)
2004 – Surikarn Chaidajsuriya (Tamiya)
2003 – Surikarn Chaidajsuriya (Tamiya)

 

Manufacturer Modified Wins

Xray – 8 wins
Hot Bodies – 6 wins
Tamiya – 3 wins
Infinity – 2 wins
Schumacher – 1 win
Yokomo – 1 win


February 9, 2026

TITC coverage presented by Cayote | Gens ace

Race week has arrived for the world’s most important annual touring car race and Red RC is excited to announce we are teaming up with electronics manufacturer Cayote and battery manufacturer Gens ace to bring you coverage from the legendary TITC in Thailand.  The 22nd edition of the race, this being Red RC’s sixth time to attend, it has become the most significant Modified Touring Car race in world coming second only in prestige to the IFMAR ISTC World Championship.  An event that brings together all the right elements that make for a truly unique racing atmosphere – location, track, ever changing conditions, and the buzz in the busy pits – it sees manufacturers & drivers bring their A-game as they seek to claim a coveted TITC title.  Last year we experienced the hugely impressive TITC debut of Michal Orlowski and the Schumacher star is back to try & defend his title, a feat that has only ever been achieved by World Champions.  Surikarn Chaidajsuriya won the first running of the race in 2003 and again a year later.  Atsushi Hara won in 2005 before going back to back in 2010.  Winning again in 2013, Hara together with Bruno Coelho are the race’s most winning drivers with 4 wins each.  The reigning World Champion, Coelho made his debut for Infinity at RC Addict last year.  Racing a brand new prototype car he couldn’t quite complete three in a row finishing second to Orlowski, but now firmly settled in with his new team he will be a serious contender to become the races most winning driver but the best n the world have their own plans to be on the top step of the podium.  With many drivers already well settled-in in Bangkok and clocking up mileage, some very heavy rain showers halting the action but hopefully not going to effect the race program, our coverage will start when the 2026 TITC officially gets underway on Thursday and concludes with the latest entry into the race’s Roll of Honour on Sunday.


December 14, 2025

Coelho retains Asia Touring Car title with dominant finals display

Infinity’s Bruno Coelho has retained his Asia Touring Car Championship title with a dominant display in the finals in Foshan, China.  With this year’s FEMCA organised race attracting a stacked field due to the Hongyu GDC track hosting the World Championships next April, while qualifying produced TQ runs from three different drivers, in the finals the reigning World Champion was untouchable.  His closest challenge would come from Awesomatix’s Lucas Urbain and while the French driver was closer in A2 he never really put Coelho’s title under threat.  Winning A2 to secure the overall victory but feeling his set-up change for A2 wasn’t the right one, Coelho would run A3 going on to win that with the first & only 20-lap run of the weekend.  While Urbain would crash out in A3, Naoto Matsukura fending off Michal Orlowski for P2, he would hold on for second overall while Orlowski completed the podium.  Ryosuke Yamamoto and Pekko Iivonen completed the Top 5 overall ahead of Matsukura and Akio Sobue.  In 13.5 Stock, it was also the Top Qualifier Shin Sawada who took the title.  After a bad start to the finals spinning on lap 1, the Xray driver won A2 & 3 from team-mate Adam Izsay.  Unfortunately the delayed time schedule meant ARC’s A1 winner Enrico Jung had to leave for his flight back to Germany so it was Jan Ratheisky who completed the all Xray podium.

Defending his title, won last year on carpet on the old indoor GDC track, with his A2 win on that final Coelho said, ‘Again we tested something on the car and it didn’t go the direction we wanted but the conditions changed as the track was along time stopped so we don’t really know the conditions but we always compare ourselves to our competitors and in A1 I had more pace and I was able to pull away and control the race.  In this one I was not really able to pull away.  Lucas was always there and I couldn’t pull away from him which meant the change we did on the car was not the right direction.  So I am going to drive A3 so we can improve the car.’  He added, ‘It is the only chance we have to compare with our competitors in the same conditions so I am going to drive again and try to work on the car to be on the right direction.’  They would find that right direction with Coelho once again the only driver to break into 15-second lap times and record 20-laps.

Reacting to his result, Urbain said, ‘overall pretty happy with P2 all things considered, obviously winning would be better but Bruno was the strongest this weekend.’  On each of his finals he said, ‘A2 went pretty well.  I made a small set-up change on the car and my mechanic Ollie Bultynck had a brilliant idea for tyre prep, which he didn’t even tell me, but the car off the line was much better than before and I could stay with Bruno initially, but Naoto went flying and distracted me and I had a bobble.  I pushed hard and could close the gap quite a bit so I’m happy with that.’  On A3 he explained, ‘we went even further in A3 with the tyre prep thing and it was too much.  It was pretty bad off the line so I just need to analyse that.  I had a silly mistake on my end which end my race but at least it did not effect the result.’   On lap 4 Urbain would flip his car on the curb and hitting board he broke ending his race.  He concluded, ‘Overall satisfied, and now onwards for a full week of testing so we can find even more.’

Reacting to his 3rd place, starting the finals from 6th on the grid, Orlowski said, ‘It’s OK.  The pace was good, I just tried to move myself up the order and I had some fun.  I tried to race clean and not take too many risk.’  The reigning 1:12 World Champion, who won the 1:12 Asia Championship at Hongyu GDC’s enclosed carpet track last weekend, added, ‘I am happy with the car.  It is hard to know exactly whose pace was what because we were racing in the final but definitely of the guys around me I was quicker than them.  Bruno was obviously really quick but my pace towards the end of the run was always very very good so I’m happy.’  The Pole continued, ‘Maybe it is better to keep things under cover a bit more with not the best result here but we have 5 more days (testing) and a lot of idea on things to test so there is a lot more to come and the Worlds will be very unique and special.’

View full results here


December 14, 2025

Coelho cruises to A1 win at Asia Touring Car Championship

Bruno Coelho cruised to victory in the opening A-Main of the Asia Touring Car Championship, the Infinity driver ending up with a one & a half second advantage over Lucas Urbain who came under pressure from a hard charging Michal Orlowski.  As the Top Qualifier, Coelho would break clear of the field over the opening lap of the large Hongyu GDC track, helped by Urbain having to battle his own Awesomatix as it got out of shape.  Starting from 3rd, Naoto Matsukura also had to fight with his car first allowing 6th place starter Orlowski through for 3rd before a second off, in which he got stuck in the track’s infield, dropped the Japanese driver to last.  Schumacher’s Pekko Iivonen was the benefactor finishing P4 ahead of Infinity’s Ryosuke Yamamoto.  In the opening 13.5T Stock A-Main, it was the prototype ARC of Enrico Jung who took the win ending Xray’s qualification domination.  Having secured the TQ, Shin Sawada would, after a jump start, spin out on the opening lap allowing Xray team-mate Jan Ratheisky go to the front.  Passed by Jung, he soon found himself back in front as Jung got crossed up but it wasn’t for long as the 3rd place qualifier again got to the front where he would stay to the end to win comfortably by 2.8 seconds from Ratheisky and Martus Benetin.

The only driver to break into the 15-second lap times, reacting to his A1 win, Coelho said, ‘The car improved for sure.  I was a bit afraid for the conditions because we had similar conditions the first qualifier (in which he struggled for rear grip) but we made the right choice (on set-up) learning from the first qualifier.’  He continued, ‘We went on the right direction, the car was pretty good, pretty solid, easy to drive and fast which is what we want in these conditions.’  Racing under the track lights he added, ‘It is very difficult to see the car, the car looks like it is going 10 times faster than during the day but yeah everything was pretty good with the car.’  Asked about changes for A2, the World Champion said, ‘we are always testing something new, at the end of the day it is the FEMCA race but it also a warm-up race for the Worlds so we have to test everything in all conditions and see what happens.  Of course I want the result but I want more the outcome of what we are doing on the car to have the knowledge for the future.’

‘Not too good’ was Urbain response on how A1 was for him.  The Awesomatix driver explained, ‘I struggled to adapt to my car.  I had a hard time trying to get a good reign on it.  It tried to kill me on lap 1 with a good old snappy snap.  So then I drove carefully and then Bruno opened a gap and Michal was catching so I tried to push and then it turned out I had massive understeer so I was totally wrong with how it felt initially.’  Looking to A2, he said, ‘I am not too sure what to do right now but I will probably adapt the tyre prep slightly for the opening laps and probably a mechanical set-up change  somewhere to recover a bit of steering towards the end.’

Asked where he pulled out his A1 performance from, Orlowski said, ‘We had good pace today.  Q3 I was really fast but Hayato was in front of me when his speedo shut down on the first lap and I tried to avoid it and went into the dust and started doing donuts but my pace was really good after that.’  The Polish driver added, ‘The pace has been good just not a good starting position.  We still have many days to test and I am not to bother about the result (of this race).’


December 14, 2025

Coelho ‘Top Qualifier’ in China with Q3 TQ run

Infinity’s Bruno Coelho is the Top Qualifier at the Asia Touring Car Championship in China, the race’s defending Champion securing pole position when he topped the third & final qualifier.  The Top Seed going into qualifying on Friday, Coelho would become the third different driver to top the timings at the Hongyu GDC track taking the final round ahead of Q2 winner Lucas Urbain but with his TQ run time faster on the improving track conditions it was the Portuguese driver who is the Top Qualifier.  Setting the fastest time of all qualifying on Friday night, before the rain washed out Saturday’s action, Naoto Matsukura would get a 3 for the final round to secure third on the grid ahead of Axon’s Akio Sobue and Infinity’s Ryosuke Yamamoto.  Michal Orlowski completes the Top 6 grid line-up after the Schumacher driver needed marshalling in the final qualifier.  In Stock, it was Xray domination of proceedings with their drivers topping all three rounds.  Q1 would go to Shin Sawada, Q2 Adam Izsay, and Q3 Jan Ratheisky but overall it is Sawada who takes the overall TQ ahead of Ratheisky, with the ARC prototype of Enrico Jung completing the Top 3 ahead of Izsay.

Enjoying a customary celebration coffee after his TQ, on his Q3 performance Coelho said, ‘It was much better.  We improved the car a little bit.’  He continued, ‘Still it was very close to Lucas.  He did a small bobble near the end and I was able to catch him.  For sure the car was better than before.  We want to make baby steps from now on because the first qualifier was pretty tough, but I think we are on the right direction and for sure we are going to change something for the finals to make it a little bit faster.’   On the track conditions and the difference between Q2 & 3, he said, ‘for sure the track now is better.  It was less windy so it was more predictable because before it was very annoying to drive.  This is also better for the fights and not all about the luck of the wind or something.’

‘Not quick enough’, was Urbain’s reaction to the final qualifier.  Ending up 9/10th of a second off Coelho, he continued, ‘Bruno as always has been very fast off the line and I am a bit slower than him.  I could see him in my mirror from the beginning but at some point I think I was pulling a bit of a gap but I had a couple of bobbles trying to push.’  He added, ‘I think I again destroyed my front tyres too soon.  I think they announced the 4-minute mark  and I said lets try to push and see what happens and with the tyre it is even worse when you really try to attack.  It falls off a cliff and you have no more grip so I guess yeah P2 is not too bad considering.’  The French driver concluded, Lets see 3-mains to go, the first laps are not easy for everyone so anything can happen.  It’s a big track but I am sure there are opportunities and we all had bobbles at some point.’

Asked how his Q3 went, Matsukura said, ‘I thought Q2 was low traction so I changed my car for more traction but the last one the traction came up  and my car was a little bit nervous, so my lap times were not so fast.  I was driving careful, careful, so I plan for the final to go back to my previous set-up.’  He continued, ‘I am happy with P3 and I will try to improve on that in the finals’.  On how the track should be to race on, the multi discipline World Champion said, ‘It’s a big track but the line is small.  If you go outside or inside it there is no traction.  I think it will be very difficult to overtake.’


December 14, 2025

Urbain takes Q2 from Coelho at Asia Touring Car Championship

Lucas Urbain has TQ’d the second round of qualifying at the Asia Touring Car Championship, the Awesomatix driver making the most of the challenging track conditions to top the times ahead of Top Seed Bruno Coelho and Akio Sobue.  With rain preventing any action at Hongyu GDC track yesterday, while a dry start to Sunday conditions would be much cooler and windier than Friday when it was Infinity’s Naoto Matsukura who took the opening TQ.  With Matsukura posting a time of 19/5:07.597 in Q1, even with a round of free practice run to open the day and get some rubber back down on the track, Urbain’s TQ time this morning was almost half a lap slower with the French driver running 19/5:14.210 with Coelho just 0.145 behind.  The top heat would see mistakes from a number of drivers including Matsukura who ended up P7.  Schumacher’s Michal Orlowski also had a spin, after which he said his car was OK as he held station on track with Urbain, but the almost 21-second lap 3 meant his time was only good enough for P6.  Another strong run from Infinity’s Ryosuke Yamamoto saw him back up his Top 3 in Q1 with a fourth ahead of Axon’s Hayato Ishioka.

‘It was the radical opposite of Friday’, was how Urbain summed up Q2.  He continued, ‘my car was far too safe this time.  It felt good off the line but after I think 1-2-minutes I overshot the corner and I had to go full lock to recover and that is never good news on this track because I could feel my front tyre dropping and dropping, especially the last two laps.  I was struggling to make the car turn. ‘  He added, ‘I knew I was somewhere in front despite the lack of announcements because I knew my car was good & strong and it was a matter of keep going and maintain some sort of a gap.  It was up to .5 (of a second) at some point and Bruno caught up to 4/10th to finish 1/10 behind, thankfully it was enough.  It will need some changes to make it aggressive and more on the noise for Q3.’  On the track conditions today he said, ‘It’s windy and cold but for some reason it effects the balance in a different way we are used to because the more traction the more the car seems to be on the noise and now with lower grip it seems to make the car more stable for some odd reason, which is the total opposite to what we are used too.  I guess it is what we have to plan for and try to figure it out.’  He concluded, ‘I have changes in mind so it should not be too difficult to make it they way it should be for now.’

The defending Champion of the renamed FEMCA Championship, this race the biggest racing accolade in the Asian racing scene, Coelho summed up Q2 with, ‘It was a solid run, no mistakes.  The car was a bit pushy.’  The 3-time back to back World Champion continued, ‘We made some changes for the conditions because today is much less traction than the previous days so we tried to make the car easier to drive but it was way too easy to drive.  So it was pushy and slow.  I wasn’t able to make the first place but we will try to make it a little more aggressive for the next one but the conditions are quite difficult out there.  You can see many guys doing mistakes so we can’t risk changing too much.’

Reacting to performance, Sobue said, ‘It was OK, the car is getting better but it was a little bit difficult with the conditions with it windy and also dusty on the track.’  The World Championship podium finisher continued, ‘I am happy with P3 but for sure it was not easy.  On the first lap and the last lap I had some mistakes and big lose in lap time so I think, while not easy, I can fight the top guys.’  On Q3 he said, ‘For sure I try more set-up changes and see what we can do for the finals.’

Asked about his run, 2014 World Champion Matsukura said, ‘The first lap I had a spin.  I changed the set-up for the conditions and the rear had no traction.  It was only the first lap, the second lap the car felt OK but then after 3-minutes it’s like no traction.’  He added,  ‘I made a little mistake and Akio passed on my inside so I got outside then after I come back on the line I had no traction.’  Looking to Q3, the final qualifier, the Infinity driver said, ‘I need a completely different set-up.  The track is different today, after 3-minutes it is not only a drop in the tyres but also my car is loose so it’s difficult.  We will try to make more traction in the rear and lets see how that works.’