Standard Porsche 911 GT3 RS places 13th overall at Nurburgring 24h race

 Standard Porsche 911 GT3 RS places 13th overall at Nurburgring 24h race
Porsche 911 GT3 RS Nurburgring 24H, Chris Harris, Roland Asch, Horst von Saurma, Patrick Simon 24.05.2010

Amidst the horde of uber-expensive, massively-tuned vehicles appearing at this month's 24 Hours at Nurburgring endurance race, one car caught onlookers off guard: a stock, OEM version of the Porsche 911 GT3 RS.  The car, which was driven to the racetrack from its garage in Weissach, Germany, over 200 km away, managed to finish the race in 13th place overall, nine laps short of the BMW M3 GT2 table-topper.

This finish was despite a last-minute driver change, with Porsche's own Walter Röhrl stepping down from the competition due to medical conditions.  In a partnership between Porsche and German magazine Sport Auto, racing drivers Roland Asch and Patrick Simon were joined by writers Chris Harris and Horst von Saurma behind the wheel of the car.

"As planned, we replaced the front brakes during the race," driver Roland Asch said in a press release from Porsche. "But other than that, the mechanics concentrated on refuelling, tyre changes and cleaning the windows during the pit stops. The car ran like clockwork."

Just ahead of the Porsche was a Nissan Z33 from Falken Motorsports, and behind the Porsche was the G RDM-Cargraphic-Logwin-Racing Porsche GT3 Cup.  Each of these vehicles completed over 145 laps.

The stock GT3 RS qualified 42nd overall, out of about 220 participating vehicles.  Porsche claims the car was in good condition after 27 hours of driving (including the journey to the track), that they then drove it another three hours back to Weissach.  After an inspection, the car's only problems appeared to be cosmetic.  This included a few dents and busted lights thanks to a collision, as well as black rubber all over the front and front-side panels.

With a 3.8-liter flat six engine that produces 450 PS (331 kW / 444 bhp), the Porsche 911 GT3 RS can sprint to 100 km/h in 4.0 seconds on its way to a 310 km/h top speed.  The car retails for €145,871 in Europe, £105,920 in the UK and $163,000 in the U.S.


Porsche 911 GT3 RS

The Nürburgring 30 hour race

Stuttgart. People describe the Porsche 911 GT3 RS in many different ways. Some say it's a ‘street-legal race car', others say it's a ‘Porsche for purists'. Ex-DTM pilot Roland Asch quite simply says it's the ‘best sports car in the world'. But, above all, the GT3 RS is this: An uncompromising sports car fully suited to racing. To prove it, the vehicle was put to the test at one of the world's toughest automobile races - the Nürburgring 24 Hours. And if that wasn't torture enough, the white-and-red liveried racer was driven to and from the race track. The result: After virtually 30 hours at full throttle, the production vehicle with the "S-GO 2400" number plate was still top fit.

Germany's most gruelling race, however, left its scars on the car's body: The driver's door and the left door sill are dented after a rough punt courtesy of a rival, and the front indicator light is smashed. The front and fenders are adorned with traces of black rubber. But all is hale and hearty under the body of the #11 GT3 RS. The engine runs like new, and not one unfriendly noise comes from its manual six-speed gearbox. "As planned, we replaced the front brakes during the race," explains driver Roland Asch (Germany). "But other than that, the mechanics concentrated on refuelling, tyre changes and cleaning the windows during the pit stops. The car ran like clockwork."

Asch received support at the Nürburgring 24 hour race from three experienced pilots: Race driver and TV commentator Patrick Simon (Germany) as well as journalists Chris Harris (Great Britain) and Horst von Saurma (Germany) turned consistently fast and perfect laps. And the production engine also performed brilliantly and with exemplary efficiency at race speed: the pilots could complete up to eleven laps before having to refuel - considerably more than most of their direct competition.

From 42nd grid position, the 911 GT3 RS battled its way up the order hour after hour to finally cross the finish line a sensational thirteenth. One of the first to congratulate the squad was Wolfgang Dürheimer, Member of the Board for Research and Development at Porsche AG: "The driver quartet of the standard 911 GT3 RS showed impressively what such a car - that customers can buy at any Porsche dealership - is capable of."

The new Porsche 911 GT3 RS is powered by a 450 hp, 3.8-litre, six-cylinder boxer engine. The high-revving unit reaches a specific output of over 118 hp per litre. Developed in the motorsport department at Weissach, the 911 GT3 RS is fitted with a particularly short transmission ratio for racing purposes as a standard feature. The dynamic engine mounts featured as standard contribute to improved driving dynamics. Depending on the driving situation, the mounts change in their stiffness and damping effect, improving the connection between the engine and body when driving under racing conditions. The aerodynamics is consequently designed for downforce - another important feature for track racing. The basic Euro price is 122,400 Euro without value-added tax and country specific fittings. Including value-added tax and country specific fittings, the 911 GT3 RS costs 145,871 Euro. In the UK the 911 GT3 RS is priced from £105,920 - with motor sport breeding included as standard.

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 dbehmoaras dbehmoaras
Wow that is very impressive. Just shows how good Porsche is at its best. High praise from someone who is not particularly a Porsche fan.
May 24, 2010 1:19 pm
 porschecarreragtmay6 porschecarreragtmay6
This is why I love Porsche.
May 24, 2010 1:25 pm
 6spdaudi 6spdaudi
I have always had a great respect for Porsche and all this does is earn a bit more. Job well done.
May 24, 2010 2:09 pm
 Edison Edison
Good job Porsche! From an engineer and automotive enthusiast.
May 24, 2010 2:14 pm
 Kouki507 Kouki507
This is how Porsche can make the brand's enthusiasts forget about the Cayenne.
May 24, 2010 2:29 pm
 sub39h sub39h
as much as i hate the Cayenne, it's doubled Porsche's sales and means they have the money to make cars like this. for that reason alone i say let the morons buy as many Cayennes as they want, so long as Porsche keeps producing cars like this.
May 24, 2010 2:45 pm
 joshg_5 joshg_5
Good point, both of you guys!
May 24, 2010 4:43 pm
 schizo schizo
So by placing a deposit for the new Cayenne I have become a moron? So be it...but it is still an awesome family hauler for just about ANY road condition...and it drives like a much smaller car than it is. It's freakin' black magic what Porsche has done with the Cayenne... Before you curse the Cayenne...drive it...then talk trash about it...
May 26, 2010 9:25 am
 Kepex Kepex
"With a 3.6-liter inline six engine that produces 450 PS..." I thought Porsche used 6 cylinder boxer engines in its 911-series...
May 24, 2010 4:18 pm
 BrianWCF BrianWCF
silly mistake. its been corrected.
May 25, 2010 12:24 am
 Mikeado Mikeado
Isn't the revised GT3 & RS a 3.8?
May 25, 2010 1:20 am
 scratchy996 scratchy996
it's the old 3.6l increased to 3.8l
May 25, 2010 5:01 am
 SZQ SZQ
And that is why in my opinion the Porsche GT3 RS is the ultimate sports car. It may not be the fastest, the most powerful, the best handling etc. but it is the best overall package.
May 24, 2010 10:41 pm
 xcer xcer
... you realize the race ended May 17th. Kinda late on news don't ya think?
May 25, 2010 12:53 am
 MTC MTC
I was stunned when I first heard Porsche was entering the road going GT3 RS to this race, and excited that my favourite car journalist is driving it alongside with Walter Rohrl. Huge congratulations to everyone involved
May 25, 2010 12:56 am
 vilivo vilivo
I hate this brand, I hate my Porsche, hate this one, hate yours, hate them all with a grand passion, its like the little german that won't go away... HOWEVER - its still a deeply emotional feeling, love them or hate them, and its THAT passion, be it positive or negative, that they create, and its what makes me not able to live without these cars - every new model that comes out, I want, just so I can do the emotional roller coaster ALL over again... except the Carrera GT, which I loved, but could never afford. GOOD ON YOU PORSCHE!!!
May 25, 2010 4:47 am
 Garais87 Garais87
it's mean nothing, in this kind of race much gives drivers with good experience....
May 25, 2010 7:56 am
 Porscheguy Porscheguy
"and $163,000 in the U.S." is not right, base price is $132800.
May 26, 2010 9:10 am