Rump’s #12 Audi starts the weekend’s first race up front after a late flying lap in a red flag-interrupted session helped the Estonian leapfrog Darryl O’Young, who was ultimately pushed down to third by Tanart Sathienthirakul.
The 15-minute session was peppered by three stoppages, which resulted in only nine drivers setting laps before the session restarted for a fourth time with five minutes remaining. O’Young held provisional pole at that point but was unable to respond to either the Audi or Sathienthirakul’s Absolute Racing Porsche, which fell just 0.029s short of denying Rump back-to-back pole positions at Suzuka.
Vutthikorn Inthraphuvasak finished best of the Am drivers in fourth after lapping his Panther/AAS Motorsport Porsche 0.9s slower than Rump. The Thai was also half-a-tenth quicker than Yuan Bo (Absolute Racing) and 0.2s clear of fellow title protagonist Yuya Sakamoto (HubAuto Corsa).
Elsewhere, Ben Porter secured AMAC Motorsport’s best-ever qualifying result, as well as Am Cup pole, after setting his fastest lap before the final red flag. That was caused by championship leader MG Choi who emerged unscathed from an accident at 130R. Fortunately, his Mercedes-AMG will be repaired in time for this afternoon’s race.
GT3’s second 15-minute session came and went without incident, and ended with a familiar name on top of the timesheets.
Picariello secured his first pole of the season in Buriram last time out and followed it up with another here. The Belgian set a 2m01.233s on his first attempt after Absolute Racing’s Philip Hamprecht briefly held provisional pole.
A track limits infringement initially dropped fellow pole candidate Marco Holzer out of contention. However, the German regrouped before setting a faster time late in the session – 0.129s slower than Picariello’s – to vault Panther/AAS Motorsport’s Porsche on to the front row.
That came at the expense of Hamprecht who finished another 0.2s behind, while Singha Plan-B by Absolute Racing’s Kantasak Kusiri moved up to fourth with his final effort.
Yuta Kamimura’s practice pace suggested ARN Racing would be a threat on home soil, and their Porsche lines up fifth after securing the team’s best-ever Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia qualifying result. Melvin Moh (Craft-Bamboo) completed the top-six ahead of Andre Heimgartner (HubAuto Corsa) and championship returnee Leo Ye Hongli (Absolute Racing).
Meanwhile, LM Corsa’s Shigekazu Wakisaka also deployed his local knowledge en route to the Am Cup class’ pole position.