The ADAC GT Masters has a new partner for the 2017 season. The Super Sports Car League and garage equipment manufacturer TWIN BUSCH Germany have agreed a partnership. The logo of the Bensheim-based company will be visible on the rear wing end plates of all the supercars lining up on the ADAC GT Masters grid. The season opener of the 2017 ADAC GT Masters will be contested on the weekend of 28th - 30th April at Motorsport Arena Oschersleben.
TWINBUSCH Germany is actually increasing its involvement in the ADAC GT Masters. In February of this year, TWIN BUSCH Germany announced that they would be entering their own Team TwinBusch for the ADAC GT Masters and fielding an Audi R8 with twin brothers Marc and Dennis Busch sharing the cockpit.
"The past weeks have been quite eventful for us in a highly positive sense," says Harald Busch, Managing Director of TWIN BUSCH GmbH. "First, we decided to enter the ADAC GT Masters with our own racing team, and now we have signed this partnership agreement with the ADAC GT Masters. As an international company operating in the field of automotive workshop equipment, we are proud to be a part of this important GT3 sprint series."
Thomas Voss, ADAC Director Motorsport and Classic, is equally pleased: "We welcome TWIN BUSCH Germany as a new partner to the ADAC GT Masters. The fact that such a well-known company as TWIN BUSCH is involved as a series partner and is even fielding its own team is a strong endorsement of the ADAC GT Masters."
About TWIN BUSCH Germany
Founded in 1997, TWIN BUSCH Germany has established itself as an expert partner in the area of professional automotive workshop equipment. Its core competencies include the manufacture of hydraulic ramps as well as tyre balancing and tyre fitting equipment. The company headquarters in Germany covers an area of 6,500m2 and comprises a product showroom, a training centre, a two-storey parts warehouse, an extensive servicing workshop and an in-house vehicle fleet. TWIN BUSCH Germany has nine offices and depots in seven countries, including the UK, France and Spain.