German Car Zone
Home
Go Back   German Car Zone > Porsche > 996
Reload this Page WCF Test Drive: Cargraphic GT3 RSC
996 Produced during 1998 - 2003.
911 Carrera Coupe/Cabriolet, 911 Carrera 4 Coupe/Cabriolet, 911 Carrera 4S/Cabriolet, 911 Targa, 911 GT2, 911 GT3, 911 Turbo/Cabriolet, 911 Turbo S/Cabriolet.

Notices
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  (#1 (permalink)) Old
Contributor
 
Bartek Sikorski's Avatar
 
Posts: 4,421
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Montreal, Canada
Thanks: 1,836
Thanked 5,095 Times in 2,179 Posts
Bartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond reputeBartek Sikorski has a reputation beyond repute
WCF Test Drive: Cargraphic GT3 RSC - 05-11-2007, 10:27 PM


For the past two years at the Tuner Grand Prix at Hockenheim, the most ferocious, 650bhp GT2s have been sent home with their tale between their legs by a car with more than 200bhp less. That machine was the flagship GT3 RSC, the road-legal racing car featured in the sidebar, with works Porsche driver Marc Basseng at the wheel.

It has gone on to form an integral part of the brand and this, the Carrera S Cabriolet-based Cargraphic GT3 RSC 3.8 is the latest in the lineage. It makes a wholesome 404bhp with a few carefully chosen mods, and a handles like a knife.
Cargraphic specialise in slicing understeer from the base set-up to produce a pin-sharp nose that turns in like a razor and lets the driver decide what happens with the rear. They can do power upgrades to 650bhp and beyond with the 911 Turbo, but a holistic approach with a real emphasis on handling and dynamics, rather than monumental power boosts, have long been their calling card.
This car comes with Power Kit 2, which takes it all the way to 404bhp and 449Nm of torque. Cargraphic gets a sports exhaust, with a high-flow trimetal catalytic set. That feeds a sport backbox with twin tailpipes 89mm internal rolls leading to the central exhaust outlet. RS Tuning do the engine mapping, hence the credit in the name and they find the horses throughout the range. It hits 62mph in 4.8s and tops out at 190mph – just shy of the Turbo’s terminal velocity.
Cargraphic has fitted a short shift kit to the gearbox and a Bilstein suspension set-up that drops the front end 35mm on to massive 20” centre-lock wheels. Yet to its credit, the car feels as finger light as Zuffenhausen’s Carrera.
The gears still slot simply home with a nudge, rather than a shove and the RSC could comfortably cover hundreds of miles and is nothing like the ragged edge experience on offer elsewhere. Of course it’s loud, and Cargraphic have one of the sweetest sounding kits on the market right now as every rev seems to reverberate round the can like an angry swarm of something dangerous.
With the hood down, one arm on the window and soaking up the German sunshine and appreciative looks from the local girls it felt no harder to helm than a standard 911. Stay away from the limits and it’s an every day car.
PASM works in harmony with the kit and in comfort mode it transmits real ruts and major traumas in the road a little harder than Porsche’s Ride and Handling team might have liked, but it’s still not enough to intrude. The team have done a masterful job of setting up sharp-handling suspension that didn’t try to break teeth, even on the railway line running straight through the centre of town. Unless you’ve grown accustomed to the cosseting Carrera suspension, the difference would be nigh-on impossible to spot without the PASM dropped to Sports setting.
It’s easy to see the sporting intent from the outside, though, as the orange RS-style graphics liberally applied to the substantial bodykit are attention-grabbing, although I’d be tempted to go for a pure black version.
A GT3-style front bumper with a visible carbon-fibre vent frame comes married to a carbon-fibre lip spoiler that might need replacing now and again but looks stunning with the lip curling round to the sides to give the front end a touch of snarling aggression. A few squared off edges have taken the marshmellow-styling approach of the base model to bits.
The door mirrors come covered in more carbon-fibre and then there’s a whole rear bumper assembly to convert the Carrera’s squat-look to the more muscular GT3 assembly. And they’ve topped it all off with another blade of carbon-fibre that boasts a seductive quality in the flesh thanks to its perfect finish and fit.
This was all skin-deep, though. After driving through the town, though, we came to a winding road through a vineyard that serves as one of Cargraphic’s favourite test roads. Of course the Nordschleife is not far away, but this road has all the ingredients: crumbling, varied surfaces, off-camber bends and a straight that will support acceleration up to fifth gear and serious speed.
And only there did the true core of this machine come through, this is no cosmetic makeover. Cargraphic have reached deep within the car and a few deft touches have transformed the lightweight of the 911 line-up into a keen, sporting contender.
Racing up to 140mph before a heavy braking zone showed a rev counter that was almost too eager to spin up and it was simply a case of keeping track with the six-speed gearbox and landing it back in the sweet spot for the constant surge of power. And with the added acoustic power of the exhaust buzzing through the open air it feels even quicker.
The suspension kit is backed up by a carbon-fibre strut brace and while this can’t compensate for the extra weight in the cabin compared to a real GT3, this car still feels keener thanks to a sharper set-up on the nose and that all-round height drop. With the lightweight, forged ‘Star’ alloys covered in 8.5x20” Michelin Pilot Sports on the front and 12x20” on the rear there’s a serious amount of mechanical grip, too.
And apart from a couple of splitter scraping moments when turning the car around on slopes it was perfectly composed over bumps and furrows, a soar in revs indicating a wheel had let go for just a microsecond was the only indication of the car working so hard.
With more grip and less of the understeer that Porsche dials in to the Carrera S as a straightforward safety measure, it inevitably hangs on much harder in the bends and will take in quite outrageous speeds through the bend as long as the driver is smooth and precise. Get cocky, switch off the electrics and push too hard on the entry to the bend, though, and the back end will step out and arc through the bend with less encouragement than you’d perhaps expect.
The answer is obvious: leave all the gadgets on and the car will keep the racing car edge without any of the associated consequences, but switch them off and you’d better be sure you can drive a car with such honed reflexes. As you just might have to…
Under those spindly centre-lock alloys a standard Porsche steel disc and calliper is plain to see, yet the keener set-up keeps it stable under heavy braking and this car would take lumps out of the standard Carrera on the middle pedal, in the corners, and more or less everywhere else. And when you’re in the mood, dropping the suspension to its hardest setting and flipping off the car’s own interference can turn this soft-hearted, sweet Cabriolet into the kind of girl you’d be afraid to introduce to your family.
WCF Test Drive: Cargraphic GT3 RSC
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Spurl this Post!Reddit! Wong this Post!
Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links
Reply

Bookmarks
Search Cloud
09 e class 135i vs 335i 2009 audi s3 2009 e class 2009 e-class 2009 fiesta 2009 ml350 2010 audi a6 2010 cayenne 2010 clk 2010 porsche boxster 2010 porsche cayenne 2010 range rover 2010 touareg a4 b8 a5 cab audi a4 b8 audi a5 cab audi a5 sportback audi a6 2010 audi a6 c7 audi a8 d4 audi a9 audi c7 audi d4 audi r15 audi r8 spider audi r8 spyder audi rs3 audi rs4 b8 audi rs5 audi s3 2009 audi s3 sportback audi s4 b8 b8 a4 b8 rs4 batman 08 bmw e89 bmw e90 facelift bmw f01 bmw f10 bmw m3 touring bmw m7 bmw z4 e89 brunei cars bugatti owners c250 cdi c300 4matic carzone cayenne 2010 clk 2010 colani ferrari e class 2009 e-class 2009 e90 facelift e90 lci fiat canada german car german car forum german car zone german cars germancar germancarzone germancarzone.com gl63 glk edition 1 jetta facelift m3 touring m6 csl maybach coupe mercedes 600 grosser ml facelift ml350 2009 nissan skyline nurburgring webcam pagani zonda price pertroeuro porsche cayenne 2010 range rover 2010 rs4 b8 sharpie lamborghini sultan brunei cars sultan of brunei sultan of brunei car sultan of brunei car collection sultan of brunei car list sultan of brunei cars sultan of brunei garage sultan of brunei's cars tiguan diesel touareg 2010 w204 w212 weismann car weismann cars weismann roadster weissmann car www.germancarzone.com z4 e89 zonda

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Sport Auto: Nürburgring Cornering Speeds Bruce Test Data 11 10-19-2007 02:02 PM
EVO Review: Porsche 997 GT3 Tycoon 997 0 05-04-2007 07:01 AM
WCF Test Drive: TechArt 997 Turbo Bartek Sikorski 997 2 04-29-2007 06:11 PM
Sport Auto: Hockenheim Cornering Speeds (+ Zielgerade) Bruce Test Data 19 04-22-2007 11:31 AM
WCF Test Drive: Cayenne Turbo Mr. M Cayenne 1 02-17-2007 11:19 AM