RE: Porsche 911 GT2 RS - official

RE: Porsche 911 GT2 RS - official

Saturday 1st July 2017

Porsche 911 GT2 RS - official

700hp, rear-wheel drive, PDK, £207K and, no, you probably won't get one



Roll-up, roll-up, feast your eyes on the latest limited-edition Porsche for the fan boys to fawn over and the speculators and flippers to feast on. There, have we covered that bit off adequately? Good, because there's a car to talk about here.

2017 the year for bronze and gold wheels!
2017 the year for bronze and gold wheels!
No lesser car than the most powerful roadgoing 911 Porsche has ever built, the new £207,506 991 GT2 RS. 700hp through the rear wheels, "civilised but not tamed" according to Porsche boss Oliver Blume and "an absolute beast" according to Mark Webber. Being a factory driver and owner of the previous GT2 RS should help him secure one of the cars due to be built, though only if he's been keeping his OPC dealer principal sweet. Obviously.

He has been involved in the development of the car, putting in some development laps at the Nurburgring and describing himself as "stoked to be involved" having apparently pestered Andreas Preuninger and his team as soon as he caught wind of it. Webber, for all his racer credentials, makes an interesting customer case study as it goes, claiming much as he likes the GT2 RS's wildman credentials he appreciates a car with air-con, nav and all the toys. As well as a massive rear wing, titanium exhausts and water injection. And the option to buy a special, £8,250 limited-edition watch by Porsche Design, meaning people can know you're among the lucky handful even if you're not actually in your GT2 RS. Read into that what you will.

Given the traditions of the GT2 the power output had to be unprecedented and 700hp in a factory built rear-wheel drive 911 is suitably ludicrous, the torque a suitably burly 553lb ft. With PDK, rear-wheel steering and all the usual refinements it is, however, another step away from the raw, 'last of the widowmaker' lunacy of previous GT2s. Which isn't to say it'll be dull to drive, of course. The stats are suitably impressive, with 0-62 in 2.8 seconds and a top speed of 211mph. The new supercar benchmark of 0-200km/h (124mph in old money) is perhaps more relevant and comes in at 8.3 seconds - the same as a Ferrari 488 GTB.

700hp. In a 911!
700hp. In a 911!
How does it do it? The 3.8-litre turbocharged engine has bigger turbos and there's a new charge cooling system with water injection (like the M4 GTS) at peak load to help reduce the temperature of the induction air. A new titanium exhaust saves 7kg and offers "an emotional sound without precedent" according to the press pack, the two outboard exhaust outlets within a greyed out section of the rear bumper among the demarcations setting it apart from the GT3 RS it otherwise resembles. Like that car it's PDK or nothing too, the first time a GT2 has been sold without a manual but in keeping with its need for ultimate speed. Or so the official line goes.

Other distinguishing features included bigger intakes in the front bumper, behind which are wire 'ties' to hold the front splitter in position when under load. Preuninger says he'd have loved to have had these exposed, race car style, but, damn those health and safety busy bodies, high-tension cheese wires are apparently not so hot for pedestrian safety. Indeed, he says much of the really cool stuff like the new carbon fibre housings for the bigger intercoolers are all hidden away - even the dome-shaped high-flow air filters look nifty apparently. But you can't see them.

Only just heard? You're probably too late
Only just heard? You're probably too late
You will have spotted the NACA ducts on the front deck though, these replacing the standard brake cooling ducts. Want to really flaunt how hardcore you are? You'll be needing to tick the box for the £21,000 Weissach Package, reprising a similarly named option offered for the 918 Spyder and saving a further 30kg through extra carbon fibre. This extends to the roof - magnesium as standard like the GT3 RS - and is given visual validation via the exposed carbon 'stripes' running the length of the car. The package also adds carbon anti-roll bars and drop links saving 5kg on their own and special lightweight magnesium wheels. These wear the widest rear tyres ever fitted to a production 911, the Cup 2s coming up as 325/30 at the rear on 21-inch rims; fronts are 265/35 on 20s.

So some very, very impressive numbers and equally clever engineering geekery. But will it have the raw edge that gave predecessors like the 997 GT2 RS such legendary status? Hopefully we won't have to wait too long to find out.

 

 

 

 

Author
Discussion

WCZ

Original Poster:

10,534 posts

195 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
underpowered (just kidding)

tjlees

1,382 posts

238 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Another unavailable Porsche ...













(but I still want one ...)

Goofnik

216 posts

141 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Legally purchase-able assisted suicide device, by Porsche.

WCZ

Original Poster:

10,534 posts

195 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Goofnik said:
Legally purchase-able assisted suicide device, by Porsche.
presumably this has traction control etc unlike the deathtrap 996 gt2

J.M.T

159 posts

156 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
WCZ said:
Goofnik said:
Legally purchase-able assisted suicide device, by Porsche.
presumably this has traction control etc unlike the deathtrap 996 gt2
Imagine turning it off in the damp lol

N88

1,299 posts

180 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Bonkers! I love it.

Can anyone tell me why manufacturers continue to publish 0-60 figures? Becoming more and more irrelevant.

Klippie

3,160 posts

146 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
A while back just after the GT3RS was launched I was lucky enough to have a driving morning with a Porsche instructor and he mentioned the new GT2 would only be an RS, and now here it is...its glorious.

700bhp...bike 0-60mph times, what a machine.

FN2TypeR

7,091 posts

94 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
The widow maker

Awesome cool

Murphy16

254 posts

83 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
The top spec, fastest and most hardcore 207K Porsche 911 should ALREADY come with everything they can chuck at it to make it faster. How can they charge another 21 grand(!!) for extra carbon bits and weight saving droplinks?

Rich_W

12,548 posts

213 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
I want one. Probably settle for the 1/18 model though

But whilst they will all get sold and maybe 80% to speculators. If you look at current 991 GT3RS prices they are slightly dipping now. Along with 911R. These were changing hands for £1/2M but they are dropping.

So if you really want a GT2RS, it's a case of waiting really. (Or getting a LHD one from abroad)

WCZ

Original Poster:

10,534 posts

195 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Rich_W said:
If you look at current 991 GT3RS prices they are slightly dipping now. Along with 911R. These were changing hands for £1/2M but they are dropping.
they've dropped tons, originally selling for £350,000 - can get one for £174k now from an official OPC


RDMcG

19,175 posts

208 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Waiting for someone to complain that its PDK only....

anonymous-user

55 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Another pointless unavailable Porsche, we get a new one every week.

Not for me, zero interest what so ever, unless you are a decent driver how could you get this anywhere near its limit, even on a track.

ETA; not that I am the target market and I hope whoever buys one gets it on the track, sadly I guess most will just sit in a garage.

Edited by Trexthedinosaur on Friday 30th June 21:18

H100S

1,436 posts

174 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
I read elsewhere its 100kg heavier than previous 997 version. I would have though Porsche would have had it closer in weight.

Edited by H100S on Friday 30th June 21:25


Edited by H100S on Friday 30th June 21:26

The Leaper

4,960 posts

207 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
I already have a Porsche Design watch...just gotta get the funds together to get the car to go with it!

R.

Dynamic Space Wizard

931 posts

105 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
RDMcG said:
Waiting for someone to complain that its PDK only....
I'm waiting for the Knightsbridge comment laugh
Someone'll say it before long...

GroundEffect

13,838 posts

157 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
H100S said:
I read elsewhere its 100kg heavier than previous 997 version. I would have though Porsche would have had it closer in weight.

Edited by H100S on Friday 30th June 21:25


Edited by H100S on Friday 30th June 21:26
The transmission will be about 40kg of that delta alone. And it is bigger.

Blayney

2,948 posts

187 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Trexthedinosaur said:
Another pointless unavailable Porsche, we get a new one every week.

Not for me, zero interest what so ever, unless you are a decent driver how could you get this anywhere near its limit, even on a track.

ETA; not that I am the target market and I hope whoever buys one gets it on the track, sadly I guess most will just sit in a garage.

Edited by Trexthedinosaur on Friday 30th June 21:18
I'm with you on this. All well and good but it doesn't really mean much to me, yet another 911 variant and none have topped the 2.7 RS Lightweight from 1973. £220k (because Porsche will recommend you have the Weissach pack for good residuals so they can ring you up in 6 months and suggest you trade it back to them to sell all over again) buys an awful lot of car. I'd probably try and grab a Viper GTS-R (probably £160k) and £60k left over. I'd wager as capable as this car (most people will run out of talent before these cars). Sounds and looks better too IMO.

red_slr

17,255 posts

190 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
£400k for most people then..

MrBarry123

6,028 posts

122 months

Friday 30th June 2017
quotequote all
Dat wing doe.

Yummy.