Porsche - … and now, the pictures
… and now, the pictures
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Even professionals look on in awe: The race-car drivers Sven Müller (left) and Earl Bamber inspect the cockpit set in its rollover cage

There it is, the new 911 GT3 RS. The sportiest interpretation of the 911 is more of a race car than ever before.

This RS wants to be and do more. It is not just a sharper version of the already powerful 911 GT3. No, it is intended to poach in the preserve of the super sports cars, as you can see by just looking at it. As it stands on the road, it looks even wider, even more massive. “We have a tire width at the front that other sports cars would be proud to have at the rear,” says GT project manager Andreas Preuninger. The front end, which is about 2 inches wider than its predecessor, rolls on 10.4-inch-wide 20-inch tires. At the rear, the RS has grown by 1.18 inches compared to the conventional GT3 to allow the 12.8-inch-wide 21-inch tires to fit under the fender, as on the 918 Spyder.

“The only thing missing is racing tires,” says Sven Müller, who has come to Weissach with his racing colleague Earl Bamber to take a closer look at the GT3 RS. And he adds: “That’s a real monster.” A fitting description. Usually there are sports cars on one side and race cars on the other. But sometimes extreme creatures emerge from the motorsport department of the development center that blur the boundaries between the two.

Müller starts gushing: “There’s so much power in that engine!” There is a newly developed four-liter boxer engine under the rear lid. A longer stroke, shorter connecting rods, a crankshaft made of high-purity steel previously found only in aviation or Formula One. This allows the engine to get up to 8,800 rpm easily. The aspirator has a new air intake system and, like the 911 Turbo, “breathes” through lateral air intakes that pump air that has been compressed by 25 to 30 millibars into its “lungs” using the ram air effect. The new engine delivers 500 hp (368 kW), which is 50 hp (37 kW) more than its predecessor, while also reducing fuel consumption.

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Air outlets at the front to prevent lift; air intakes at the rear to provide the engine with compressed air

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At 186 mph, the new RS generates an overall downforce of 727.5 pounds without producing problem zones of air resistance. The ribbed air outlets on the front wings are partly responsible

“We have outperformed ourselves when it comes to efficiency,” says project manager Preuninger. That applies to the aerodynamics as much as the engine. Sven Müller runs a hand over the rear wing. At 186 mph, the new RS generates an overall downforce of 727.5 pounds without producing problem zones of air resistance. A detail on the front end of the vehicle is partly responsible for this. “Do you see the ribbed air outlets on the carbon-fiber fenders? You usually find that only on pure sports cars,” says Earl Bamber.

His enthusiasm grows when his colleague Müller shows him the standard cockpit encased in a rollover cage. “Look, there’s even a speed limiter for the pit lane,” says the German, pointing to a switch in the center console. The RS is usually the second Porsche in a customer’s garage and is a pure driving machine, often found on the racetrack. “Oh, it has a USB port,” praises Bamber. As one would expect in this digital age, Porsche also offers a track app that measures lap times with GPS.

For ambitious drivers, the newly programmed control unit also stores real racing parameters such as rpm, lateral acceleration, and brake pressure. On the iPad, fast laps can be laid over one another virtually, allowing the GT3 RS to follow itself around the track as a ghost car. Its predecessor will only be able to see the new RS as a speck on Döttinger Höhe at the end of its lap around the North Loop of the Nürburgring. The developers estimate the new one to be at least ten seconds faster.

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Barely visible, but easily perceptible: The four-liter six-cylinder boxer engine gen­erates 500 hp (368 kW) and turns at a maximum of 8,800 rpm

Sven Müller knocks against the carbon front hood. As you would expect, the RS had to lose weight to become a real racing machine. An exhaust system made of titanium saves around nine pounds and, on the racetrack, the battery can be swapped for a lighter lithium-ion rechargeable battery. The real trick, however, is the striking roof with the wide groove in the middle, which reduces the frontal area. “The roof is an innovation not previously found in this form among automobiles. It is made of magnesium sheet metal and weighs 2.2 pounds less than a carbon-fiber roof,” says Preuninger.

The technical upgrade should have made the new RS significantly heavier than the conventional GT3: the increased dimensions of the chassis and the larger wheels alone account for 44 pounds of extra weight. The same applies to the dual-clutch transmission, which replaces the conventional gearbox. But the idea that fast lap times can be achieved only with extremely lightweight construction is no longer true. “If we have systems that improve performance and fit the vehicle, we put them in,” says Preuninger. And so the new GT3 RS is only 22 pounds lighter than the previous one, because the engineers did not wish to forgo a torque vectoring differential and rear-axle steering, both of which improve handling and speed on curves.

“Unfortunately, even as a new factory driver for 2015, I won’t be given a GT3 RS as a company car,” sighs Bamber. The RS is not limited, but until the production window closes in Spring 2016, a maximum of two thousand units will find their way to happy new owners.

By Markus Stier
Photos by Victor Jon Goico

911 GT3 RS (Type 991)

Engine: Six-cylinder boxer
Displacement: 3,996 cc
Power: 500 hp (368 kW)
Maximum torque: 339 lb.-ft. at 6,250 rpm
0–60 mph: 3.1 sec
Top track speed: 193 mph