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The Hungaroring is a Formula One race-track near Budapest, Hungary, location of the Hungarian Grand Prix. It became the location for the first Formula 1 Grand Prix behind the Iron Curtain in 1986.

Hot and dusty, those are the keywords for the Hungaroring.

Held in the middle of a central European summer, it is the only established circuit in the Grand Prix calendar to have never seen a wet race. The circuit is generally dusty from underuse throughout the season, and its location on sandy soil means that if a car drops a wheel off the track, it kicks up massive clouds of dust.

Normally an underused circuit becomes faster over the weekend as the track rubbers in; however, with the Hungaroring this generally does not happen, as the increased dust counters the greater grip. This is a circuit where there is often an advantage in running early in qualifying.

Due to the nature of the circuit - twisty and dusty off the racing line - overtaking is rare. The Hungaroring is often associated with boring, processional races.

The Hungaroring has traditionally seen a large influx of Finnish fans; this is generally perceived to be due to the lack of a Scandinavian Grand Prix, rather than the shared Finno-Ugric roots of the Finnish and Hungarian languages.

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