John Heinricy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Heinricy (born 19 November 1947)[1] is a U.S. automotive engineer and noted racecar driver. He had a long and distinguished career at General Motors, serving as Director of the GM Performance Division[2] before retiring from GM in October 2008.[3] He also has a sub 8 minute time in a 2009 Cadillac CTS-V around the Nürburgring.[3]

Racing record[]

SCCA National Championship Runoffs[]

Year Track Car Engine Class Finish Start Status
1991 Road Atlanta Chevrolet Camaro Chevrolet Showroom Stock GT 2 3 Running
1993 Road Atlanta Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet GT1 1 1 Running
2001 Mid-Ohio Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 1 2 Running
2002 Mid-Ohio Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 1 1 Running
2003 Mid-Ohio Chevrolet Camaro Chevrolet American Sedan 1 2 Running
Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 1 1 Running
2004 Mid-Ohio Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 1 2 Running
Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 1 1 Running
2005 Mid-Ohio Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 1 1 Running
Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 1 2 Running
2006 Heartland Park Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 4 8 Running
Chevrolet Cobalt SS Chevrolet Showroom Stock C 25 3 Retired
Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 1 9 Running
2007 Heartland Park Chevrolet Cobalt Chevrolet Touring 3 1 Disqualified
Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 14 4 Retired
Chevrolet Cobalt SS Chevrolet Showroom Stock C 1 2 Running
2008 Heartland Park Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 2 1 Running
2010 Road America Chevrolet Corvette Chevrolet Touring 1 10 2 Retired
2011 Road America Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 2 3 Running
2012 Road America Pontiac Firebird Pontiac American Sedan 23 4 Retired
2020 Road America Chevrolet Camaro Chevrolet American Sedan 6 9 Running
Toyota 86 Toyota Touring 4 3 1 Running

References[]

  1. ^ "John Heinricy | Racing career profile | Driver Database". www.driverdb.com. Retrieved 2021-07-23.
  2. ^ "Corvette Racing – John Heinricy". www.corvetteracing.com. Retrieved 2021-07-23.
  3. ^ a b "Veteran GM engineer John Heinricy will lead Hennessey Venom F5 development". . 2018-12-18. Retrieved 2021-07-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

External links[]


Retrieved from ""