Tag Archives: Porsche

Porsche is adding a new track to the Atlanta Experience Center

Atlanta — okay technically Hapeville — is getting a new track! Porsche recently broke ground on a massive expansion to its Experience Center in Georgia. The existing track and skid pad and off-road route and whatnot will stay in place, but the track will be expanded much further, to allow more people to experience the limits of a Porsche in safe and fun ways! This will effectively double the length of track on site, adding new features and corners inspired by some of the best race tracks in the world.

Not only will the expansion add miles of new track for customers to use, but the new 33-acre expansion will add a new Porsche Classic Factory Restoration facility, and a new parking deck to make up for the added capacity. The recently-opened Porsche Service Center South Atlanta is already built and operational on the grounds of this new expansion. It’s pretty cool that you’ll be able to take your vintage Porsche in for restoration work at the new facility. And while you’re there you could test a new one out on track.

“The physical connection a driver enjoys with our sports cars is core to the Porsche brand, which is why we’re expanding this option even as we and our dealers invest in new digital touchpoints for customers. The two worlds – digital and real – complement each other,” said Kjell Gruner, President and CEO of PCNA. “Whether a Porsche owner or not, the Experience Centers in Atlanta and LA serve as destinations where anyone can experience the thrill of a Porsche sports car and learn more about the brand. The Atlanta center has already hosted more than 6,000 visitors a month in normal times, and we hope the track expansion excites many more to come engage with Porsche.”

So what does the new track include? Elements of the 1.3-mile expansion include a Laguna Seca Corkscrew-esque expansion, a Nurburgring-Nordschleife style Karussel, and a section inspired by the Tail of the Dragon in the Smoky Mountains. You’ll get a pretty good idea of what your new Porsche is capable of by doing a few laps around this course, I can already tell you that without even having seen it. There’s also a new low-friction wet circle, a simulated “ice hill” to demonstrate traction control, and a large 135×555 foot patch of asphalt for handling showcases.

The two tracks will operate independently on most days, but it’s possible to link the two for an impressive 2.9-mile full course for special events. Porsche expects the track to be finished and operational by the first quarter of 2023. PEC ATL has been open since 2015, and serves as the brand’s North American headquarters.

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Manthey Racing develops a new aero package to make your 992 GT3 even faster

As a Porsche fanatic, you probably already know about Manthey Racing. The racing team company based at the Nurburgring has been made a subsidiary of Porsche in recent years, and currently runs Zuffenhausen’s 911 RSR program in FIA WEC competition. It also built the street-legal body kit that helped the 991 GT2 RS achieve the fastest production car record around the Nordschleife. It’s fair to say that Manthey knows a few things about building fast Porsches.

So when the company dropped the first images of this blue beauty this week, we knew that it’d be an amazing piece of kit. If you have a 992 GT3, and you’re not prepared to wait for the next GT3 RS, here’s your opportunity to build on the awesomeness of the GT3 with an even more track-focused aero, suspension, and brake upgrade package.

Let’s start with the aero. The biggest news is the giant wing at the rear. Similar to the wings you find on Porsche’s motorsport division cars these days, it carries a “swan neck” upright and adjustable foil for lots of downforce if you need it. There’s also a new splitter, a new diffuser, cannards, and aero disks for the rear wheels. Of course the wheels are bespoke for the Manthey kit, and the disks on the rear of the car are said to cut down on rear air flow deformation, allowing for smoother flow over the rear wing, meaning you get more downforce without the drag of a larger wing.

After that, it’s the typical track toy adjustments. Manthey co-developed a coilover kit for this car with KW Suspension to give the car absolute four-way adjustability for precision tuning. And the brakes are seriously beefed up in the form of more track-oriented pads and stainless braided brake hoses. I mean, they aren’t going to do much improvement over Porsche’s already impressive carbon ceramics, but the pads are less street oriented than what comes on the car from the factory.

Our goal of improving the performance of the Porsche GT models even further for track use, without making too many changes to the car’s essential DNA, and, at the same time, coming up with an attractive package for customers who love to drive on the track, has meant a lot of work for us with the new model,” said the company’s chief of development, Stefan Mages. “Alongside the performance, I’m also really pleased with the car’s appearance.

I think my favorite part of this package is that the naturally aspirated 4-liter flat-six engine stays exactly as it rolled down the assembly line. There is no boost in power, not even a single horsepower more. Manthey looked at that 503 horsepower engine and decided it was plenty up to the task of going fast on track. I mean, the PDK-equipped model runs from 0-60 in 3.4 seconds, and there’s very little reason you’d need to go quicker than that, even on the race track.

This is a very cool package from a very cool company for a very cool car. If you have a GT3 already and you want to differentiate yours from all of the other GT3s in your neighborhood, you could order up the Manthey Racing package. But really, you should only do that if you plan to take your GT3 to the race track and use it for what it was built to do.

Championship-leading plaid Porsche grabs last-minute victory in VIR IMSA round

Photo: Motul Oil

The 2021 IMSA season is coming to a close, and it’s looking increasingly like the Pfaff Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 R has what it takes to secure the GTD championship this year. With three wins from the last four races, the team of Zacharie Robichon and Laurens Vanthoor has pushed its championship bid to a huge gap with just one race remaining in the season, the 10-hour Petit Le Mans race at Road Atlanta, going down in mid-November. It looked like the No. 16 Wright Motorsports Porsche would join the Pfaff team on the GTD podium, but were pushed down to fourth with a final lap hip-check from the Vasser-Sullivan Lexus team.

The Pfaff team had their work cut out for them on Saturday, as they had qualified fairly well, but were relegated down to 13th on the grid with a penalty for the crew between sessions. With a stout GT-only field to work through, nobody would have expected them to make the massive charge that they did. Robichon had a monster first stint and got the car up to fifth before passing off to Vanthoor. Around 11 minutes remaining in the race, the leading Turner Motorsports BMW was tipped into a spin by a GTLM-class Corvette, and the result was a flat tire and loss of a lap for the title contenders. By that point in the race, the Pfaff team had worked its way up to second on the road, and was gifted the win with the BMW’s poor luck. Vanthoor took the checkered flag by 2.755 seconds over the Paul Miller Racing Lamborghini with the Lexus rounding out the GTD podium.

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#9: Pfaff Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3R, GTD: Zacharie Robichon, Laurens Vanthoor

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Photo: IMSA

“I still don’t believe it,” Vanthoor admitted in victory lane. “This is one I’m probably happiest about because yesterday was just our mistake. A stupid mistake, but we win and lose together. Today, the guys made up for it with triple the (effort) because what got us in front was the pit stops – amazing what they did. And Zach, the overtakes (he completed) at the start and how quickly he got by and got up to the front, that’s probably those two things that gave us the race. I’m sorry what happened to [the BMW]. We were catching them, and I would’ve liked to see a battle at the end, but it went the way it went.”

Over in GTLM the WeatherTech racing Porsche 911 RSR of Kevin Estre and Cooper MacNeil could do no better than third in a three-car class, despite being easily the fastest car on the track. The factory-prepped Corvettes started the race from first and second, while MacNeil started the race in third and was mobbed at the start by the leading GTD cars. He managed to keep the car on the lead lap before handing off to Porsche factory ace Estre, who clawed the car back into contention with speed and consistency. Several bouts of contact with the grey number 4 Corvette, however, pushed the Porsche back.

Estre’s former teammate Nick Tandy, now driving for Corvette Racing, had this to say about the contact:

“Honestly, the Porsche should have won the race. But honestly, when you kind of lose your brain and start driving stupid, stuff happens. Luckily with our Corvettes, we kept them on the track and didn’t do too much damage to them.”

Harsh words from someone who should probably know what it’s like to drive a 911 RSR.

Photo: IMSA

2022 Porsche 911 GT3 Keeps Everything You Love And Still Manages To Be Quicker

Illustration for article titled 2022 Porsche 911 GT3 Keeps Everything You Love And Still Manages To Be Quicker
Photo: Porsche

The new 911 GT3 isn’t really that new at all, at least in concept — and that’s what makes it brilliant. Oh, sure, the body is clearly wider, there’s that new swan-neck rear wing you could land a small aircraft on and the front suspension loses the struts for a double-wishbone scheme, similar to the one inside the 911 RSR. The new GT3 is definitely a better car on paper, but it’s also a familiar one in all the right ways.

Porsche pulled the cover off the 992-generation GT3 today, and there are two key components among the raft of updates that are mercifully constant. First, the engine is still a naturally-aspirated, 4.0-liter flat-six that revs all the way up to 9,000 rpm, now producing 502 horsepower — roughly 10 HP more than the 991 GT3’s engine did by the end of its lifespan. Second, it can still be had with an optional six-speed manual transmission. You have to hand it to Porsche; for all the buzz around the Taycan and its SUVs, it’s still giving the purist GT crowd what it clamors for.

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Photo: Porsche

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The new 911 GT3 is a bigger car than the one it’s replacing, but Porsche found clever ways to nip and tuck and keep the car’s overall curb weight on a par with its predecessor. The seven-speed PDK-equipped GT3 tips the scales at 3,162 pounds, which is between 50 and 10 pounds heavier, depending on the gearbox inside the 991 you’re comparing it to. A carbon-fiber reinforced plastic hood, decklid and wing, along with windows, brake discs and forged-alloy wheels all optimized for lightness help the GT3 dance when you command it to.

And boy, can it dance. Porsche took the new GT3 around the Nürburgring Nordschleife as you’d expect, though the lap time it churned out is nothing short of extraordinary. At the hands of Lars Kern, the 992 GT3 circled the ’Ring in 6:55.2, if we’re going by the older, slightly shorter route for calculating Nordschleife laps. This scheme offers a better point of comparison because it allows us to see how the 992 GT3 stacks up against older Porsche models.

The post-facelift 991 GT3 did a 7:12.7 in 2017, and a year later the 991 GT3 RS turned in a 6:56.4. How about the 918 Spyder? Even Porsche’s flagship hypercar, for its $845,000 price when new, could muster but only a 6:57 flat. Listen, I’m not one to gawk over Nürburgring records where cars manage to shave a tenth of a second off, but beating the previous generation car by 17 seconds is a praiseworthy feat.

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Photo: Porsche

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How, you might ask, is the GT3 managing this when it weighs about the same, if not a little more, and cranks out similar power? Well, that new suspension probably helps navigate the Nürburgring’s infamous bumps and judders, but most of the credit likely goes to the new car’s aero kit, which is capable of generating up to 150 percent more downforce than the 991 GT3’s when tweaked to its most aggressive setting. Say what you will about the aesthetics of the “hung” wing at the back — personally, I think it’s one of the most attractive renditions of that design — but the vast uninterrupted surface area where the pylons would normally connect does wonders for high-speed cornering.

In a straight line, Porsche says the new GT3 will hit 60 mph in 3.2 seconds with the seven-speed dual-clutch transmission equipped and top out at 197 mph. If you’re less bothered by turning laps on track days, you’ll be happy to know a wing-less Touring version of the new GT3 is in the works — and that’s a model we’ve had nice things to say about in the past.

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The regular GT3 will start making deliveries in the fall for a price Porsche hasn’t disclosed yet. History suggests about $150,000 is a reasonable prediction.

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Photo: Porsche

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What Is This High-Riding Porsche 911 Prototype Spied In Testing?

Here’s a weird one. Earlier this week the Porsche shown here was spied testing at the Nurburgring. It looks pretty much like a regular 992 Carrera 4S but it’s sitting much higher on its suspension and has weird fender flare wheel arches. In the spy video below from StateSideSuperCars, this oddball 992 is powersliding all over the place, jumping curbs, and generally hauling butt. Judging by the sound of its exhaust the car is turbocharged, though that’s hardly a surprise as all 992 models are currently turbocharged (at least until the next gen GT3 hits the real world). So what is this thing? Is Porsche capitalizing on the Safari market by selling one straight from the factory? Is the company going to try to regain its Dakar championship?

It’s far more likely that this is just Porsche testing some oddball suspension setups to see what its car does under extreme circumstances, but if Porsche does want to introduce an off-road sports car, this would hardly be the first time. Porsche has decades of experience in rally and raid-style off-road racing. Think back to 1968 and Porsche pressed the 911 into rally service with Vic Elford winning the Monte Carlo Rally that year. Not to mention the company’s several Dakar and East Africa Safari Rally successes.

Safari silliness has taken the Porsche world by storm, kicked off by friend of the site Leh Keen’s Safari cars, plus dozens of others built by the likes of Kelly Moss Motorsports, the two LuftAutos, and more. And don’t forget that Gemballa and Ruf have both teased extreme modern off-roading 911s. Would it really be that much of a surprise that Porsche offered a safari 992? I don’t think it would. The only thing that surprises me is that Porsche didn’t do this five years ago.

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Porsche Suffers Disaster In IMSA Charlotte Roval Sprint Race

It’s been said before, but it bears repeating; 2020 is just a horrible year to be a Porsche fan when it comes to racing. Whether it be the balance of performance jerking the team around, or just a long and frustrating series of bad luck and mistakes, the team is having its worst sports car racing year in a long damn time. That unlucky streak continued on Saturday night as the IMSA series GTLM class headlined a late night rain race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, running on the road-course configuration known as the NASCAR Roval. Both Porsche 911 RSRs had crashed badly enough to seek retirement in the first 20 minutes of the waterlogged race.

The bowl of a circuit saw rain fall all day, and the NASCAR race which had run earlier in the day was equally difficult to navigate, with cars spinning and crashing all up and down the field. Porsche saw both the #911 and the #912 car crash out before either of them pitted for a driver change in the relatively short 2-hour sprint race.

Qualifying was an up and down affair for Porsche on Friday, with Fred Makowiecki putting the car on the outside pole in second place. The Prototype classes were absent from this weekend’s running, giving Porsche the second overall starting position. Laurens Vanthoor, however, crashed his 911 RSR in qualifying with 10 minutes remaining in the wet session, tearing up the car’s rear suspension without setting a quick time. He was therefore forced to start the race from sixth in the six-car GTLM field after the team worked tirelessly to get the car repaired for race day.

Within minutes of each other, Vanthoor lost control of his #912 Porsche as he made contact with the barrier in the track’s infield section, and Fred Mako suffered a similar fate. Both cars limped back to pit lane, and both were ultimately retired with damage. Vanthoor was retired immediately after his lap-four incident, but Mako was sent back out to turn a few more laps under caution before he made the call that the car was too difficult to drive in its damaged state and it was pulled from the race after eight laps of running.

Corvette ended up winning the race, the team’s sixth race win of the 2020 season. The yellow and black team from Bowling Green, Kentucky holds a substantial points lead going into next weekend’s Petit Le Mans, and it is very likely that it will take the championship. Porsche, meanwhile, doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of recovering enough points to mount any kind of recovery effort. All Porsche can hope for is to string together enough luck to win a race before the IMSA team effort is disbanded at the end of this season.

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