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By Jethro Bovingdon
First Drives
01 July 2011 09:42
If you’re one of those people who think that Porsche should have given up on the 911 formula years ago – despite the gazillions of race victories and countless great road iterations that prove you’re wrong – then the GT3 RS 4.0 is just another refinement of a flawed concept.
However, for those of us who are in on the secret that the 911 is actually bloody brilliant and that rear engine offers massive traction advantages and a unique tactility, this is the 997 we’ve been waiting for.
The new 2011 GT3 RS 4.0 is the last hurrah for the motorsport-derived Mezger flat-six (it was designed by Hans Mezger, who also did F1 engines when they had over 1000bhp), the last hurrah for the Porsche Motorsport-developed 997s and it’s utterly magnificent.
Just 600 will be built, with less than 30 coming to the UK at a whopping £128,466, so it’ll be pretty rare. In fact, all have already sold out.
However, this car trades on dynamic brilliance rather than scarcity. The engine is the main event, with the block from the RSR racer, a unique induction system from the GT3 R Hybrid racer and trick new headers, race cats and a titanium exhaust to let those cylinders breathe. The result is a startling 494bhp at 8250rpm and 340lb ft at 5750rpm. Porsche claim it’ll run from 0-62mph in 3.9 seconds and hit 193mph.
That engine is hooked-up to a six speed manual running the same shortish gear ratios from the GT3 RS 3.8 (significantly shorter than the ‘normal’ GT3) and it feels every bit of its 494bhp. The torque is just e-v-e-r-y-w-h-e-r-e and yet it revs like a motorbike, too. A GT2 RS might be quicker, but we’d trade that car’s mighty thump for this thrilling delivery and the accuracy of the throttle that can only be achieved with a normally aspirated engine.
That pretty much sums it up, but when you remember that the 3.8 is one of the great drivers’ cars of all time, that’s hardly a criticism. And there are enough improvements beside the engine to make the 4.0 unique and even more compelling. It’s got the rose-jointed rear lower arms from the GT2 RS, plus that car’s carbon fibre bonnet and front wings, stiffer springs and bespoke PASM damper tuning, too. The result is a car that retains enough suppleness for all but the most awful roads and blessed with incredible precision in the way it changes direction.
The very brave might find a smidge of understeer in tighter corners but the extra torque and the accuracy of the drivetrain means you can easily neutralise it with more power, or adopt a more considered turn-in phase and then utilise the torque and superb traction to fire out of corners with the engine chomping around to 8500rpm. Increased aero from front dive planes and a more steeply raked rear wing are said to also make a big difference to high speed cornering on track – but on road it’s enough that it feels secure and trustworthy.
It’s easy to be cynical about another new 911, but this car is something very special indeed: The culmination of the 997’s rapid evolution, a celebration of that amazingly strong and characterful engine, a supercar that cuts the crap and just delivers a pure and addictive driving experience. If you’re a 911-hater this piece and these pictures won’t convince it’s anything other than an engineering dead end. But about 3-minutes behind the wheel would. You’d be babbling about how great it is. I guarantee it. And you wouldn’t be alone. I’ve barely stopped doing just that since I drove it.
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Porsche 911 GT3 RS 4.0 (2011) CAR review
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varunjk says
RE: Porsche 911 GT3 RS 4.0 (2011) CAR review
Don't know about you lot, but I feel Audi has done a better job of adding Aero kit in a well-integrated, reserved and yet aggressive manner to its R8 GT. Compare those front aero flaps to those on the R8 and you see a little of what I mean. The Audi's are tapered at the ends, making the overall effect rather more pleasing than on this car, where they resemble cardboard add-ons. Same for the rear Aero kit. I know this vehicle is intended more for function than for visual pleasure, but even on a regular GT3 RS the effect is far more viusally exciting. Another point, while we argue - I've not driven a GT3 and I'm not even likely to possess license to do so for a year or two, but really does it deserve the sort of idolatry jethro gives it? Surely, there's got to be something in it that isn't perfect? Love that interior though, and the way in which Porsche has put all of its racing know-how into the last car of this amazing lineage.
21 October 2011 16:34
JohnnyD says
I'm not going to argue with Mr Bovingdon. If he says it what it is, then it must be! It would have more impact and less cynics however if we weren't bombarded by so many different takes on the same car.
I'm not going to argue with Mr Bovingdon. If he says it what it is, then it must be!
It would have more impact and less cynics however if we weren't bombarded by so many different takes on the same car.
07 July 2011 17:08
GeorgeLambo says
So the GT3 RS 4.0 is amazing but comare it to other lightweight mentalist supercars availible such as the Gallardo SL and the MP4-12C. Of course the price has a big difference but would you pick up a girl in it as @carmobster said. The McLaren and the Lambo is lightened but camouflaged. If thats the best 911 it must mean that its the equivalent of a 458. Which as proved in CAR Magazine is hard to live upto, If you don't have the £50000 extra get a Vantage S and have some change and the Vantage is better looking,sounds better and cheaper but of course the Aston is more British.
05 July 2011 23:18
carmobster says
As a car enthousiast there is nothing here you can't love. It's why Jethro gives it full marks. And yet despite all this, it's not the car you would pick up a really lovely girl in isn't it? It's not the car with the big wing on the back and the roll cage that shows off good taste. It's not the useable everyday sportscar. It's a track car, but why should I go to a track. I want a Italian mountain road and to drive there I need a car that is compliant and get me there without a broken back. And on the way I like to have the company of a lovely girl. So in the end this car is perfect for......car journalists and for the people who enjoy their whole weekends at circuits....I am not that type.
As a car enthousiast there is nothing here you can't love. It's why Jethro gives it full marks. And yet despite all this, it's not the car you would pick up a really lovely girl in isn't it? It's not the car with the big wing on the back and the roll cage that shows off good taste.
It's not the useable everyday sportscar. It's a track car, but why should I go to a track.
I want a Italian mountain road and to drive there I need a car that is compliant and get me there without a broken back. And on the way I like to have the company of a lovely girl.
So in the end this car is perfect for......car journalists and for the people who enjoy their whole weekends at circuits....I am not that type.
05 July 2011 13:24
Agoogy says
Some odd car 'enthusiasts' out there....
03 July 2011 22:36
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