RE: 911 RSR debuts at Silverstone

RE: 911 RSR debuts at Silverstone

Monday 8th April 2013

911 RSR debuts at Silverstone

First round of World Endurance Championship this weekend is debut outing for 991-based 911 RSR - Le Mans follows



We await Porsche's return to frontline LMP1 racing at Le Mans next year with bated breath but this year we've got something else to look forward to in the shape of the all-new RSR. The second racing car developed from the 991 following the one-make Cup version, the all-new RSR underlines how important GT and sportscar racing is to Porsche and throws the 991 into the fray in the headline GTE-Pro category. Meanwhile an updated version of the 997-based GT3 R will continue to fly the flag for the 911 in GT3 racing and its equivalent series around the world.

997-based GT3 R will remain the GT3 racer
997-based GT3 R will remain the GT3 racer
If you're confused about these various GT racing categories and who and what can race in which then you're not alone. And we're working on the definitive PH guide for our mutual benefit right now!

In the meantime we can all feast our eyes on the RSR, the part it plays in the 50th anniversary of the 911 and delight in the fact it makes its racing debut this weekend at Silverstone in the opening round of the 2013 World Endurance Championships. The factory team, supported by lords of the 'ring Manthey Racing and merged into Porsche AG Team Manthey, will compete in the six-hour race with two cars. Two further RSRs - this time privateer 997-based versions which have been on the scene since 2004 - will be running in the GTE-Am class.

The factory RSRs benefit from the significantly longer wheelbase of the 991 ('about 10cm' for the racer according to Porsche) and will run a new wishbone front suspension set up rather than the MacPherson struts of the outgoing car.

All-new 991 RSR is a significant step forward
All-new 991 RSR is a significant step forward
As raised by Chris Harris in his chat with Porsche's Wolfgang Hatz it keeps the iconic 'Mezger' flat-six from the previous RSR, tuned to 460hp and displacing 4.0 litres. Geeks will recall it was the crank from this engine that unleashed the extra capacity for the GT3 RS 4.0 road car. It drives through a new six-speed paddle-shifter-operated sequential gearbox, factory drivers Marc Lieb, Richard Lietz and Romain Dumas unavailable for comment on the topic of whether this means they'll feel less involved in the driving experience... Drivers for the other factory car will be Joerg Bergmeister, Patrick Pilet and Timo Bernhard.

Changes for the 991 RSR include a new centrally mounted radiator, improved air conditioning and quick-release body panels to enable rapid repairs in the pitlane. Porsche is also boasting of much-improved weight distribution and a significantly lower centre of gravity thanks to carbon fibre wheelarches, doors, dash and underbody.

An all-new factory RSR in frontline sportscar racing is, for any fan of the sport, an exciting development. And if you want to see it in action get yourself along to Silverstone this weekend.









Author
Discussion

MagicalTrevor

Original Poster:

6,476 posts

229 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Mmmm, WANT!

Checks lottery numbers...

HokumPokum

2,051 posts

205 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Does it have 2 pedals or 3 pedals? From the pic, it looks like it still has a foot operated clutch.

chrisironside

662 posts

162 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Sexy beast!

Burnham

3,668 posts

259 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
That 991 looks like an absolute weapon! POTW already?

Lets hope the 991 GT2RS looks something like that, for the street.

Krikkit

26,513 posts

181 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
HokumPokum said:
Does it have 2 pedals or 3 pedals? From the pic, it looks like it still has a foot operated clutch.
It'll be the standard fare of a sequential manual rather than an auto - hence clutch pedal for 1st, hopefully everything else being clutchless shifting.

Oz83

688 posts

139 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Phwoaaarrrr!

Angelus

2,209 posts

164 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Can't wait to see it, and hear it. smile

GroundEffect

13,834 posts

156 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
HokumPokum said:
Does it have 2 pedals or 3 pedals? From the pic, it looks like it still has a foot operated clutch.
It'll be the standard fare of a sequential manual rather than an auto - hence clutch pedal for 1st, hopefully everything else being clutchless shifting.
If it's anything like the GT-cars I've sat in, it'll be clutchless upshifts but heel & toe downshift.


Antj

1,047 posts

200 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
this car is why this seasons Carrera cup lineup is so shocking,

soad

32,878 posts

176 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Nice piece of kit. cloud9

marcosgt

11,018 posts

176 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Antj said:
this car is why this seasons Carrera cup lineup is so shocking,
You'll need to expand on that, I'm afraid... Shocking good? Shocking bad? Why is this car related to Carrera cup?????

M.

c_seven

162 posts

192 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Looks amazing, making me even more excited about Silverstone this weekend, now all I have to do is make it through a weekend of camping without freezing to death so I can see it Sunday!

HokumPokum

2,051 posts

205 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
HokumPokum said:
Does it have 2 pedals or 3 pedals? From the pic, it looks like it still has a foot operated clutch.
It'll be the standard fare of a sequential manual rather than an auto - hence clutch pedal for 1st, hopefully everything else being clutchless shifting.
So paddles are simply another way of shifting than the usual sequential gear stick rocking back and forth. meaning you still have to use the clutch when pulling the left paddle

Joe911

2,763 posts

235 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
GroundEffect said:
If it's anything like the GT-cars I've sat in, it'll be clutchless upshifts but heel & toe downshift.
No - it is sequential but full paddle operated with automated clutch - not like the Cup etc. used to be.
Also - heel/toe would not be necessary as automated throttle blipping has been 'normal' for ages now.

Edited by Joe911 on Monday 8th April 17:29

Craiglamuffin

358 posts

180 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Looks incredible.

Luca Brasi

885 posts

174 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Looks fabulous, wonder how it will stack up against the 458.

canucklehead

416 posts

146 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
looks great, apart from the current de rigeur squiggly-paint&graphics-on-white colour scheme on the photos shown.

k-ink

9,070 posts

179 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
PH said:
997-based GT3 R will remain the GT3 racer
Does this imply the 991 is not up to the job?

Dr Clive

23 posts

133 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
Joe911 said:
GroundEffect said:
If it's anything like the GT-cars I've sat in, it'll be clutchless upshifts but heel & toe downshift.
No - it is sequential but full paddle operated with automated clutch - not like the Cup etc. used to be.
Also - heel/toe would not be necessary as automated throttle blipping has been 'normal' for ages now.

Edited by Joe911 on Monday 8th April 17:29
"Automatic clutch"? - No, with paddle shift the clutch remains engaged, on the upshift the ECU cuts the ignition momentarily whilst the current gear disengages and the next one engages, so no need to come off the throttle either ("flat-shift"). On the downshift the ECU uses inputs from revs and road speed to blip the throttle to match the revs when the driver requests the change with the left paddle. Not disengaging the clutch sounds brutal, but the dogs are made to take the strain.

DC

antilag

160 posts

144 months

Monday 8th April 2013
quotequote all
That's one portly porker! I usually love a 911 with a massive wing but think this one looks like its got the mumps.