RE: Gemballa Mirage
RE: Gemballa Mirage
Wednesday 20th December 2006

Gemballa Mirage

Is the Porsche Carrera GT just a bit too soft? Ian Kuah tries Gemballa's alternative


Gemballa Mirage
Gemballa Mirage

Most car enthusiasts would be happy with a standard Ferrari or Porsche. But in the rarefied stratosphere of the ultra wealthy, exclusivity is everything. The fact that someone else might turn up at the golf club in the same car is a turn-off, or a good reason to call on an aftermarket tuner for a healthy dose of bespoke fettling.

none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none
none

Uwe Gemballa has been personalising Porsche cars for 28 years, and his ultimate dream is to make a complete supercar of his own. However, as the costs involved in that have been known to swallow the GDP of a small country, Uwe is content to base his creations on the superb sports cars created in nearby Zuffenhausen.

From the outset, Gemballa’s cars have been based on the Porsche 911 platform,  so when Porsche announced the Carrera GT, Uwe got very excited indeed. Using a 612bhp V10-engined, carbon-fibre, mid-engined 21st century supercar that will do 200mph out of the box as the basis for your offering is every tuners dream.

Uwe has a huge customer bank accumulated over nearly three decades. Whether successful businessmen or princes, all his clients have one thing in common, they are dyed-in-the-wool car enthusiasts. More than that, many are so pleased with the statement of individuality a Gemballa car makes for them that they keep coming back for more.

Firm orders

When Uwe first mooted the idea of the new Mirage, reviving the name of one of his wildest late-1980s 911 Turbo-based creations, he sent a few images of this proposed Carrera GT based car to his regular clients.

The response was overwhelmingly positive, and 10 firm orders were taken within six months, with the first customer to place a deposit even willing to send his white Carrera GT from Dubai to be the development car.

We charted the progress of this car from the day it arrived at his workshop back in January to its final roll out in early October.

With its white paint cutting a sharp contrast to the cloudless blue sky on this warm autumn day in Stuttgart, we can imagine how amazing it will look against the backdrop of Dubai.

Its new carbon-fibre front splitter, side skirts and adjustable rear wing mean the Mirage GT looks like it was born to race, and the modified roof profile with its working engine intake air scoop smoothes out the rather abrupt rear roofline of the standard Carrera GT, making a positive contribution to the car's styling.

Not just styling

Uwe is proud of the fact that all his aerodynamics parts were developed in the rolling-road wind-tunnel at Stuttgart University, and the resulting numbers relate to a simulated 155mph. This is no mere styling exercise.

The front lip is secured in one of three positions with eight screws and has a 30mm range of adjustment. In its furthest forward position, it contributes 25kg of downforce to rebalance 35 to 85kg of downforce provided by the adjustable rear wing in its most aggressive setting as recommended for the racetrack.

The roof scoop required some clever re-engineering of the engine cover, which now hinges from the rear, and of the detachable roof panels, which have been given a new quick release system. One of the few options you can order from Gemballa is the rear reversing camera neatly incorporated into an aerodynamic housing on top of the roof.

Keeping it cool

The roof intake is just one aspect of the engine breathing and cooling issue. Up front, the new bonnet panel has a big vent in its leading edge that exhausts the ram air that is drawn in through the huge under-bumper intakes and then blown over the massive radiator. This has aerodynamic as well as cooling benefits.

Keeping the engine bay well ventilated has been something of a crusade for Uwe in recent years, especially with his turbocharged cars. The same principles are applied to cooling the engine bay of the Mirage GT, and the extra rear grilles in the new rear bumper and engine cover as well as the mesh grille around the exhausts deliver significantly more cooling airflow for the engine bay.

A new rear exhaust system reduces back-pressure and exits through four rather than the standard two pipes. The ECU is reprogrammed to make full use of the enhanced intake and exhaust flow. The result is a claimed power hike of 68bhp from the standard 612bhp to an impressive 680bhp.

Filling the arches

Gemballa even went to the trouble of making new lightweight forged alloys. Like the factory wheels these are also five-spoke centre-lock 9.5J x 19 and 12.5J x 20-inch and use the standard 265/35ZR19 and 335/30ZR20 Michelin Pilot tyres. But with 10mm more offset, they fill out the arches more convincingly, giving the car a more purposeful stance in the process.

Apart from a full leather re-trim and carbon-fibre details, Gemballa modified the dashboard and centre console to incorporate a state-of-the-art widescreen DVD driven satnav system and data centre. The latter is connected to sensors that allow you to measure acceleration, braking and cornering g as well as lap times.

On the road

On the road, the Mirage GT really turns heads. Despite the fact that people in this area are used to seeing factory Carrera GTs as well as the tuned Porsches from Gemballa, TechArt and SpeedArt, all of whom are based nearby.

As we cruise the streets, we note the civilised ride, which is no different from standard and the near normal exhaust note, which only comes alive when you gun the throttle.

Full chat on-track

The real differences become apparent when we reach the Malmsheim test track and can give the car its head in safety. On full chat down the runway, the Gemballa exhaust gives off a fruitier note, a touch more bass in the low-end and a touch more scream at the top.

The 10 per cent more power is more apparent in the upper rev band where the engine’s already lusty charge to the redline becomes stronger and even more incisive. Without reference to the standard car though, it feels so smooth and progressive you would think that it was meant to be like this. In essence, Gemballa has given the motor bigger lungs.

What is more obvious however, is the extra downforce at speed. There is not much wrong with the standard car in this respect, but in fast cornering, the Mirage feels that extra bit more planted, especially at the rear.

Unless you live near an Autobahn or a racetrack, the modest technical improvements that the Mirage showcases will be largely irrelevant, but the head-turning looks alone are worth the entry price, which by the way can add up to nearly the cost of a standard Carrera GT.

Porsche's aborted GT?

Porsche admitted some years ago that the concept for the Carrera GT came from its aborted GT racer, funding for which was diverted to the Cayenne programme.

So, in creating the Mirage GT, maybe Gemballa has given enthusiasts an even more exclusive supercar and a glimpse of what Porsche’s Le Mans sports car might have looked like.

And if you have to ask the price...

Author
Discussion

trenchtown

Original Poster:

147 posts

242 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Somehow I feel that the percentage of the customers, who can actually let these cars live up to their full potential is very, very limited.

Everytime I read about (souped up) supercars going straight to the Middle-east it makes me cringe with jealousy.

davyboy

746 posts

278 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Looks great in white though!

paulie-mafia

3,321 posts

246 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Engineering improvements aside, it's one ugly piece of kit. They've really spoiled the styiling IMO. And those wheels are awful.

Adam B

29,462 posts

277 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
over-egging the pudding?

just rich Arabs trying to out wallet each other in a tasteless fashion

mat205125

17,790 posts

236 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
trenchtown said:


Everytime I read about (souped up) supercars going straight to the Middle-east it makes me cringe with jealousy.



A large proportion will cover only a handful of miles, and live with the owners other several hundred cars in a large warehouse ... They lose track of what they have!

Marki

15,763 posts

293 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
trenchtown said:
Somehow I feel that the percentage of the customers, who can actually let these cars live up to their full potential is very, very limited.



How many owners of any performance car can extract the last 10ths out of them

Oddball RS

1,757 posts

241 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Not that it matters but........


Don't like the wheels - whats up with a lovely set of BBS if you want to give it the racer look? look like something of a Kahn 6 Series.

Daft name, sounds like a shiny plastic wind up toy.

German obsession with the number of tailpipes is back again, when oh when will the first company use six? you all know its coming..................

RobCrezz

7,892 posts

231 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Those wheels are awfull!

I do love the over all "race-ready, LeMans" look, though.

Lord-Flasheart

6,634 posts

237 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Love the race car looks, not sure about the colour though.

bergmeister

1,084 posts

267 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Gemballa,ruf,Khan etc all the same,looks plastic and tacky .
But if you need to have something that little bit differant,and you can afford it,why not.

jvaughan

6,025 posts

306 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
that looks absolutly fantastic.

A lot more agressive than the GT.

spyder_106

1 posts

237 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
what can I say, I like it, maybe a move to the middle east is in order!

DaveR

1,209 posts

307 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Proof positive that having money and having style are two separate things.

The standard Carrera GT is a beautiful car. That thing looks like it's just crashed into the Ripspeed display at the local Halfwits.

anonymous-user

77 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
bergmeister said:
Gemballa,ruf,Khan etc all the same,looks plastic and tacky .
But if you need to have something that little bit differant,and you can afford it,why not.


in a few weeks the UK is going to be awash with all these old imported LHD CGT's, you boys are going to need something for us to tell you all apart. do gemballa do centre lock spinners?

billb

3,198 posts

288 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
stunning

VladD

8,136 posts

288 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
I'd like to see it hooning around Le Mans in racing livery. Alitalia would be good, if a little odd for the make of the car.

GTRene

20,916 posts

247 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all






Money, some have a lot and some don't...
I wished I had a bit more to spend on making/creating my own dreamcar...
Well, dreams I havehehe
GTRene

jaik

2,002 posts

236 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
Wheels aside, that car looks absolutely stunning if you ask me, one of the most attractive cars I've seen in a long time! Does anyone else think it looks like a little like a beefed up Exige?

corradoboy1983

100 posts

255 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
paulie-mafia said:
Engineering improvements aside, it's one ugly piece of kit. They've really spoiled the styiling IMO. And those wheels are awful.


I have to agree in a lot of ways. The wheels are horrible, and actually look more "Max Power" than "Performance Tuner". Don't care how light they are!
the Yellow calipers look horrible, and to be honest the whole car looks too "custom"

If they had done a more subtle job, and kept it looking more stock (more along the lines of tuners such as Ruf/9FF), it would have looked a lot better IMHO.

If I had the money and was customising a Carrera GT, I would have it redesigned to my own spec, and wouldn't pay for it to be made to look cheaper!

Drgp

203 posts

237 months

Wednesday 20th December 2006
quotequote all
I was thinking it is a lot of money for an Exige.

I like that people do these things though. Shows me the worlds not totally mad.