RE: The very first customer Ruf SCR is for sale
RE: The very first customer Ruf SCR is for sale
Saturday 7th February

The very first customer Ruf SCR is for sale

There are dozens of 911-shaped things in the classifieds - there's only one with a carbon monocoque


These days, it almost feels like a car company is notable if it isn't modifying rear-engined Porsches in some way. The air-cooled 911s that stand out in the 2020s are those that aren’t backdated. But despite the proliferation of restomods now out there - perhaps because of them, in fact - Ruf still stands out as something very special indeed. Because unlike some reworkings, we're talking here about some of the finest driver's cars in the world - in their own right. 

The return of the CTR ‘Yellowbird’ in 2017 was almost like a rebirth for Ruf, introducing as it did a new carbon monocoque. It brought considerable benefits for both weight and rigidity, as well as offering a technical advancement that nothing else 911-shaped in the world could offer. Anything that features a carbon monocoque, really, is a special kind of supercar. 

The architecture would go on to underpin additional Rufs after the Yellowbird, including this: the SCR, which debuted in 2018. It kept a lot of the CTR special sauce, though power came from a 4.0-litre flat-six instead of a twin-turbo 3.6. While it meant less power, it still produced 510hp, and that was made at 8,270rpm. With a six-speed manual, of course. So it was making new GT3 power (still new GT3 power, in fact), while weighing significantly less (1,325kg against a 1,488kg for a 991.2) thanks to the composite. And probably boasting better torsional rigidity. You just know it would have been epic. 

Now there’s one for sale in the UK. The very first customer car of a 70-unit SCR run, in fact - chassis #02 is a pretty cool claim to fame. You’d have to imagine that the owner was a very special Ruf client; not because of the outside - Birch Green is bold, but not out of the ordinary - but thanks to the interior spec. Because, yes, that is Brown Deerskin Alcantara, flower embroidery and headrests with the state of Bavaria sewn into them. Never going to see another one, at least… 

Let’s not lose sight of the SCR’s awesomeness, though. The carbon monocoque really was just the start, with ceramic brakes, KW V5 suspension (as is now offered for the Carrera GT), carbon seats, even a nose lift so it could be used around town. One review suggested the SCR was a ‘fabulous balance of raw engagement and confidence-inspiring composure on the road’. That’s before considering how good it might be on a track, too. 

In fact, it’s hard to think of what a Ruf wouldn’t be suitable for, as the 9,000 miles on this one will attest. Smaller than most modern supercars, so it’ll be wieldy and usable on all roads, fast enough to be exciting without being so preposterously powerful it’s dangerous, recent and beautifully built with classic charm to the looks. They know what they’re doing at Ruf, in case that hadn’t been blindingly obvious for decades. Which is why you’ll need a healthy seven figure sum to get one. But as a track car, B-road blaster, daily sports car and rarely-seen supercar all in one, an SCR will surely be (lots of) money well spent. Perhaps a visit to Bavaria is on the cards…


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

m62tu

Original Poster:

123 posts

61 months

A stunning automobile but the paint is too tasteless. Can't wrap my head around why someone would order that. And at that price point I'd wager most of us would wait 2-3 years for RUF to build your dream spec.

Bencolem

1,150 posts

261 months

Surprised it’s only 10% lighter than a 992 GT3 given all the money invested in a full carbon monocoque chassis and the fact that it must be more than 10% smaller than a 992 GT3.

loveice

673 posts

269 months

Does Ruf have any real automotive designers or it runs like a typical British kit car company in terms of its design? Or maybe it has a few, but decision makers always overwrite some of the real automotive designers' choices?

HTP99

24,622 posts

162 months

I love the colour, this looks superb.

Billy_Whizzzz

2,513 posts

165 months

Love the colour. Less sure on interior. And wheels. And some of the detailing around rear valance. Am sure it is a blast but I’d have a singer over this, given the choice.

Vroom101

843 posts

155 months

m62tu said:
A stunning automobile but the paint is too tasteless. Can't wrap my head around why someone would order that. And at that price point I'd wager most of us would wait 2-3 years for RUF to build your dream spec.
Unfortunately RUF has completed the production run of the 70 SCRs they are going to make. Even more unfortunate is the fact I didn’t win the lottery so I could buy one. I’d have had one over a restomod from Singer in a heartbeat.


loveice said:
Does Ruf have any real automotive designers or it runs like a typical British kit car company in terms of its design? Or maybe it has a few, but decision makers always overwrite some of the real automotive designers' choices?
RUF is a manufacturer in its own right, and knows what its doing. I’d guess the design is a combination of keeping as much of the shape of the 964 as possible, whilst also allowing for the engineering requirements that enable it do nearly 200mph. I think it looks great, but I’m not a fan of the colour of this particular example.

loveice

673 posts

269 months

Vroom101 said:
RUF is a manufacturer in its own right, and knows what its doing. I d guess the design is a combination of keeping as much of the shape of the 964 as possible, whilst also allowing for the engineering requirements that enable it do nearly 200mph. I think it looks great, but I m not a fan of the colour of this particular example.
I'm not questioning any of its engineering or the overall shape which is fine as it's basically a 911 of the era. But it's the design details, the proportion of certain design, colour and trim, choices of parts... RUF has often had rather strange decisions on those issues. It seems their decision makers insist on certain design choices just because they want them. Then again, if they make business sense, then good for them. Not all well designed cars sell/sold well...

m62tu

Original Poster:

123 posts

61 months

Vroom101 said:
m62tu said:
A stunning automobile but the paint is too tasteless. Can't wrap my head around why someone would order that. And at that price point I'd wager most of us would wait 2-3 years for RUF to build your dream spec.
Unfortunately RUF has completed the production run of the 70 SCRs they are going to make. Even more unfortunate is the fact I didn t win the lottery so I could buy one. I d have had one over a restomod from Singer in a heartbeat.


Maybe fellow Pistonheads readers can all pitch in £500 and we can crowd fund one.

GreatScott2016

2,204 posts

110 months

These don’t usually do it for me, but aside from the colour, I quite like it. The asking price made me smile though smile

m62tu

Original Poster:

123 posts

61 months

loveice said:
I'm not questioning any of its engineering or the overall shape which is fine as it's basically a 911 of the era. But it's the design details, the proportion of certain design, colour and trim, choices of parts... RUF has often had rather strange decisions on those issues. It seems their decision makers insist on certain design choices just because they want them. Then again, if they make business sense, then good for them. Not all well designed cars sell/sold well...
RUFs other offerings are tweaked 997, 991, 992s; this is their nostalgia project. It may look like a 964 but it is not. Completely engineered to rinse out the defects of old 911s aided by modified proportions. Unlike Porsche who source parts from well know part supplier brands, RUFs price reflects that they work on an aerospace like level of precision and certainly work with F1 supplier tier.

NGK210

4,489 posts

167 months

Wonderful.
Props to the owner for actually driving the thing.
Love the green.
But the cabin is frickin’ weird and too personal.
So I’d haggle a price reduction commensurate with Ruf’s fee for a cabin re-trim.
And further compensation for not being able to drive the beauty while it’s at Ruf’s.

BTW…
PH, will you kindly fix your site’s formatting! irked

RDMcG

20,394 posts

229 months

I like it apart from the map and the door trim .

Slowlygettingit

853 posts

63 months

The worlds fastest chocolate lime….
Don’t mind the exterior colour but the interior doesn’t do it for me

Would like to be in the position where choosing this or a singer was a serious consideration…..

PRO5T

6,816 posts

47 months



Those wondering about the weight/size-it may look like a 964 but it’s actually modern 911 sized-ish.



S600BSB

7,240 posts

128 months

Colour wouldn’t be my first choice, but that is fabulous.

biggbn

29,752 posts

242 months

That is about perfect. Absolute wow!!

LotusOmega375D

9,027 posts

175 months

PRO5T said:


Those wondering about the weight/size-it may look like a 964 but it s actually modern 911 sized-ish.

Same colour as the Lamborghini opposite?

nismo48

6,161 posts

229 months

Wow that's a great piece of automotive engineering and kudos to the original owner for commissioning such a bold individual specification.

Don Roque

18,214 posts

181 months

Looks absolutely incredible from the outside but the interior is absolutely horrific. I can imagine the commissioning buyer had imagined it would look great and it arrived looking like... that. Urgh.

Still, in terms of overall format and spec, this is probably as near to perfect as motoring gets. Yes, I'd buy it if I had the cash and I'd send it off for a retrim and then keep it forever.

Chris Stott

18,262 posts

219 months

Looks great in profile, but rear is terrible… bumper/valance/exhaust.