RE: RPM Technik Porsche 996 CSR: Driven

RE: RPM Technik Porsche 996 CSR: Driven

Thursday 27th November 2014

RPM Technik Porsche 996 CSR: Driven

Affordable, underrated and ripe for a bit of modding, RPM Technik finds the hidden magic in the 996 Carrera



A classified search for sub-£15K coupe manual 996 Carreras can be found at the conclusion to this story. What follows may be considered inspiration to click on it.

Ducktail is RPM's signature 'CSR' look
Ducktail is RPM's signature 'CSR' look
Like me you may consider a Porsche 911 an attainable dream. Like me you may well be bitterly disappointed, whether staring at an optioned up 991 Carrera costing over £90K or wondering what happened to all the cheap 964s. Dammit, even Targas are on the up, leaving just the Tiptronic cabrios. Well, those and early 996 coupes for little over £10K. Blobby looks and accepted wisdom that critical engine components are fabricated from chocolate play their part, the thud of early 997s bottoming out in the low 20s keeping this affordable first rung on the 911 ownership ladder within reach of many.

If you're enlightened enough to realise the 996 isn't a complete snotter and willing to wait it out until everyone realises (may take a while) RPM Technik has come up with a most entertaining way to pass that time. We've already had a go with its 997 'CSR' and it's now offering a similar package for the 996.

Weather for Silverstone sessions was ... fowl
Weather for Silverstone sessions was ... fowl
Built for comfort AND speed
It's not been stripped and caged into a wannabe GT3. Nor has it fallen into the backdate trap, the soap bar shape and unfashionable fried egg headlights sparing the 996 that fate. Rather the CSR takes the best bits of a standard Carrera and tidies up the remainder. The result is a convincing vision of a robust, compromise free 911 suitable for daily use, Sunday B-road blasts and the occasional track outing.

Some tasteful decals, a GT3esque front bumper and side skirts paired with, in this case, some rather extravagant HRE wheels (£6K extravagant...) and RPM's signature carbon ducktail give the CSR package its distinctive look. This car also has a carbon front lid, colour matched mirrors and a few other tweaks but you could, of course, keep it sleeper and invest purely in the mechanical upgrades.

Webbed feet possibly an advantage in these conditions
Webbed feet possibly an advantage in these conditions
Which, if seemingly subtle in purpose, are extensive in range and convincing in application. A KW Variant 3 suspension kit, including top mounts and drop links, is matched with Powerflex bushes and Eibach hollow anti-roll bars with geometry to RPM's preferred CSR settings. The engine is compression tested and borescoped before being reassembled with an uprated IMS bearing, lightweight clutch/single mass flywheel and RPM's custom made sports exhaust. A Wavetrac limited-slip differential is also fitted. The upgrades are finished with an uprated throttle body and intake plenum with BMC air filter.

Mix and match
The CSR can be bought as a package or the upgrades can be added in stages according to taste and budget. If the aesthetics appeal RPM's Darren Anderson advises you can "save yourself a reasonable chunk" by starting with an Aerokit Carrera that already has the nose and skirts in place. Depending on the spec and extent of any remedial work along the way he reckons on an all-in cost of between £16-£19K, with a decent car achievable for less than £30K including the potential donor vehicle. Strong money for a 3.4 996 Carrera but, it could be argued, wisely spent if you want a thoroughly sorted Porsche for driving rather than posing or charting investment potential.

Rest assured this is one 996 that won't go quack
Rest assured this is one 996 that won't go quack
My drive in the CSR demonstrator kicks off at RPM's Buckinghamshire base, destination Silverstone GP. A perfect demonstration of the car's dual purpose brief and, in theory, an idyllic way of spending a Sunday morning. Were it not for the hour and fact that a rib with an outboard would appear the more suitable rear-engined transport for this venture.

No matter; for the KW dampers on the 996 RPM has backed off somewhat from the more "feral" (Darren's words) set-up of the Ohlins equipped 997 and the CSR feels pliant and accommodating. The exhaust booms across the still dark countryside and there's very little bob or weave, just a sense of a car that's been very thoroughly sorted front to back, inside and out. And doesn't the 996 feel small compared with a 991 or even 997!

These B-road proportions are more in keeping with traditional 911 virtues of course, likewise an interior that's workmanlike rather than bedecked in bling and stiction-free steering that chatters away in your hands without ever dominating the conversation.

Fits the bill as an all-round 911 for road and track
Fits the bill as an all-round 911 for road and track
All in the delivery
The flywheel - half the weight of the standard item - and uprated clutch mean throttle response is beautifully crisp and undiluted, the rev counter very happy to swing through the entirety of its travel and leave a charismatic booming flat-six howl in its wake. It's a gorgeous noise but one likely to trip track day noise meters - slip-on cans are available if required.

Built for durability and response rather than headline grabbing power graphs no numbers are quoted, 3.4s as standard producing 300hp and 258lb ft. By the seat of the pants it's rapid enough to make enjoyable, invigorating progress without the need to flirt with a prison sentence. Like the size, this makes a refreshing change from many current Porsches.

At the track the conditions are even worse but the CSR remains wonderfully predictable and the softer set-up works well in the wet without any sense of wallow. It manages to find decent turn-in even through the standing water and under power the diff hooks up brilliantly, the characteristic 911 traction advantage evident on corner exit and the rear end utterly planted even in torrential conditions. If not seemingly that fast at first it's actually deceptively keen to pile on respectable three-figure speeds down Silverstone's straights. And carry a significant proportion of that through the corners in a fluid, flowing style that's utterly joyful to behold.

No longer the ugly duckling (Enough already - Ed.)
No longer the ugly duckling (Enough already - Ed.)
That crisp throttle response and the delicate steering are all set up for a neat, tidy driving style and the 996 feels entirely comfortable skating in that limbo between grip and slip. It's a car to drive precisely, a soaring flat-six crescendo on the way up the rev range and finely metered blips on the way down providing a soundtrack to prick the hairs on the back of your neck as well as any 911. Proper job, in other words. And, visually, it proves how little work is required to make the 996 look properly purposeful too. OK, six-grand wheels are an indulgence but as a package it looks distinctive without trying to be something it's not.

What was I saying about that classifieds link? Here it is...


PORSCHE 911 CARRERA (996)
Engine:
3,387cc flat-6
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 300@6,800rpm
Torque (lb ft): 258@4,600rpm
0-62mph: 5.2sec
Top speed: 175mph
Weight: 1,320kg (DIN unladen)
MPG: 23.9mpg (NEDC combined)
CO2: N/A
Price: c. £10,000-£15,000 before conversion, RPM Technik 996 CSR as tested sold for £29,995 (not including HRE wheels shown)

RPM TECHNIK 996 CSR CONVERSION
- Carbon ducktail (colour coded), CSR side skirts, CSR graphics package, colour coding of mirrors to wheels, GT3 front bumper, GT3 wheels, CSR carbon sill trims
- KW Variant 3 suspension kit, Powerflex bushings, Eibach anti-roll bars, CSR geometry set-up, uprated brake fluid and pads
- CSR Wavetrac limited-slip differential and short-shift kit
- CSR lightweight flywheel/clutch, IMS bearing upgrade, Evans waterless coolant, low temperature thermostat, CSR sports exhaust, full engine inspection
Price: £16,000-£19,000 fitted, dependent on final spec, see RPM Technik for details







   

Photos: Anthony Fraser


With thanks to Silverstone. For information on 'Your Car Our Track' days, including Taster Days from just £45 per session, call 01327 320298, email trackdays@silverstone.co.uk or see the Silverstone website. To celebrate the end to an amazing Grand Prix Season Silverstone is now offering 10 per cent off all three-day, adult-only, grandstand tickets*! To book your 2015 Formula 1 British Grand Prix tickets call 0844 3728 300 or book online.

*Subject to availability; offer open for a limited time only.

Author
Discussion

loveice

Original Poster:

648 posts

247 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
IMO, Gen 1 996 (beside Gen1 996 GT3 front bumper and side skirts) is how modern 911 should look like. Beside the interior, the exterior of Gen 1 996 has the best surface design (all the surfaces flow together, all the shutlines go somewhere meaningful), best proportion (not too wide, too big) and details (all designed to suit the surface flow) of all the watercooled 911s. Gen 2 of 996 has the wrong headlamps. And CS4/Turbo's proportions were wrong. 997s and 991s... well...

Edited by loveice on Thursday 27th November 09:49

findtomdotcom

689 posts

240 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
loveice said:
997s and 991s... well...
997s and 991s are fantastic, so much better than the 996...... Horses for courses my friend.

Edited by findtomdotcom on Friday 5th December 10:03

loveice

Original Poster:

648 posts

247 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
findtomdotcom said:
997s and 991s are fantastic, so much better that the 996...... Horses for courses my friend.
I'm only talking about the exterior design from pure automotive design point of view...

LasseV

1,754 posts

133 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
loveice said:
I'm only talking about the exterior design from pure automotive design point of view...
Yeah, i agree with you. 996 is the most beautiful watercooled porsche. And the size is right, too.

I love this CSR thing. Actually i want this.

findtomdotcom

689 posts

240 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
loveice said:
I'm only talking about the exterior design from pure automotive design point of view...
OK I can see where you are coming from.

smile

Bloitus

110 posts

163 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
If only I had another 16-19k to spend there are certainly some features i would love to have. I think i'd go for everything bar the cosmetic changes as i prefer a more standard look, although i could be persuaded to get the duck tail at a push! smile

Zoin

128 posts

140 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
loveice said:
I'm only talking about the exterior design from pure automotive design point of view...
I agree, apart from the headlights. The fried eggs still look horrid to me so I much prefer the 996.5.

The simplicity of the shape, particularly in narrow-body form, is aesthetically very pleasing compared to the fussiness of later models.

But then, as a 996.5 owner, I am thoroughly biased smile

dom9

8,068 posts

209 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
I spent a bit less and went a bit further (carbon seats, alcantara odds and ends) with Autofarm and ended up selling it (it went to Hong Kong) for £12k!

These make excellent B-road and occasional track cars and I think they're at a price where I am tempted to have another go (after I've finished the Clio Williams money pit)...

But the re-sale on a 'tuned' NA 996 is horrendous... You have been warned wink

Zoin

128 posts

140 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
Bloitus said:
If only I had another 16-19k to spend there are certainly some features i would love to have. I think i'd go for everything bar the cosmetic changes as i prefer a more standard look, although i could be persuaded to get the duck tail at a push! smile
Exactly what I was thinking.

g7jhp

6,961 posts

238 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
I think the addition of a ducktail really finishes the 996 off well (compared with the standard lid)!





A number of the aircooled guys have started picking up cheap 996's and discovered they dynamically very good.

Fit a nice pair of Recaro Pole Positions and I can see manual 996 C2 coupe's becoming quite sort after.

Bloitus

110 posts

163 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
g7jhp said:
... I can see manual 996 C2 coupe's becoming quite sort after.
Here's hoping! i picked mine up for a steal... superb value. I don't expect them to rocket up in value any time soon though.

LordHaveMurci

12,040 posts

169 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
Bloitus said:
g7jhp said:
... I can see manual 996 C2 coupe's becoming quite sort after.
Here's hoping! i picked mine up for a steal... superb value. I don't expect them to rocket up in value any time soon though.
I don't think anybody expected the 964 to rocket in value...

Maybe I'm biased (& hopeful) as a long term 996 owner though!

PistonBroker

2,414 posts

226 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
I fully expect an early 996 to be my first foray into 911 ownership. I am conscious that I need to get a move on though as they surely won't stay this cheap for this long.

As said, I could live without the cosmetic upgrades - though I've got nothing against them - but a lot of the oily bits are the sort of thing I'd expect to do anyway as time went on.

Good stuff!

JDMDrifter

4,040 posts

165 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
Really like the Porsche modding scene, it seems to offer something for everyone.

This one seems quite a bargain to me!

soad

32,877 posts

176 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
g7jhp said:
I think the addition of a ducktail really finishes the 996 off well (compared with the standard lid)!





A number of the aircooled guys have started picking up cheap 996's and discovered they dynamically very good.

Fit a nice pair of Recaro Pole Positions and I can see manual 996 C2 coupe's becoming quite sort after.
Ducktail works for me. smile

gashead1105

559 posts

153 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
Hmm, I like that rather a lot...

Vacationboy

171 posts

113 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
+1

The 996 was a fresh take on how the 911 in the 21th century.
an early 996 with ambers and cup 2 wheels is a wonderful looking thing...
much better than a 993, and dont get me started on the cop-out 997

HeMightBeBanned

617 posts

178 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
Vacationboy said:
and dont get me started on the cop-out 997
I really like the 997. I think it's the best looking of the lot. Sorry if that offends.

redcard

Vacationboy

171 posts

113 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
There is nothing "wrong" as such with the 997, its simply a return to form by porsche where they listened to all the whine. That being said, I think it has some rather unflattering lines though... bit of a mismatch

hondansx

4,566 posts

225 months

Thursday 27th November 2014
quotequote all
If the 996 was good looking, they'd be worth more. It ain't, so they aren't.

You can't polish a turd, and for me this RPM car is a good example of this. I'm sure it handles very nicely, but if you can't afford the proper Porsche, for the same money you could get an M3 CSL, which already has the engine note, handling and track-bias as standard.