A drive in the Carrera T and GT3 Touring
#121
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
I suspect that is figured into the price in many cases, but it's also why it's a bummer the same $,$$$ for PCCB on a Carrera S or GTS as you do on a plain Carrera. The upgraded brakes are a big part of the draw on an S or a GTS.
#122
Rennlist Member
Fantastic photos, thank you @stout! I agree with you regarding White and the optional 5-spoke wheels. I wish GT Silver was present at the event. I'm struggling between those two colors. I just don't know how GT Silver + Agate accents would look? I feel that the accents would be washed out and look out of place possibly? I know it pops quite nicely on White.
Side note 1 - I've been reading through issue 3 of 000 and it seems you predicted the arrival of the Carrera T with your F22.2 concept! They are pretty similar in spec! Coincidence?
Side note 2 - 000 is phenomal. Extremely pleased with its quality and depth. Will definitely be subscribing!
Side note 1 - I've been reading through issue 3 of 000 and it seems you predicted the arrival of the Carrera T with your F22.2 concept! They are pretty similar in spec! Coincidence?
Side note 2 - 000 is phenomal. Extremely pleased with its quality and depth. Will definitely be subscribing!
#123
Rennlist Member
Stout - do you happen to have any other pictures of the interior gloss trim? That's the one thing I just can't put my figure on with the interior config -- how does it all hang together, is the gloss black subtle (a good accent) or in your face...really hard to tell on the configurator.
#124
Race Car
Great photos!!! Thanks for sharing these!
Sorry for the delay on this...holidays and fires to put out. Not going to claim these as amazing photos, but I took them for my own documentation and maybe they add a bit of info for someone? If not, well, they're free.
The gray mirrors just didn't work for me...
...but they looked a lot better on the white car. Suspect the same would be true on GT Silver.
Gray on the rear badging and grille...
You really see the rear spoiler out the back window—this is taken at head height and you do see it in the rearview mirror, unlike a regular 991.2 Carrera coupe.
Sorry this is a bit out of focus, but I have to say the gloss black door trim worked better in person than on the configurator.
Lightweight Gorilla Glass means no defroster. It can be deleted, and must be deleted if you want a rear wiper.
The "chase" cars.
I really dug the Sport-Tex, but its shiny nubs mean it's not as grippy as I want cloth seats to be.
I like a lot of colors, but every press trip has a "winner." While the GT3 Touring was all about black, white was the best color for the T. Wish GT Silver had been there...
...also wish one could delete the gray paint on the wheels and mirrors. But it's a nit for sure and some will like it. I'd own it with the optional five-spoke wheels on a GT Silver or White car.
Yes, things got dirty on the Monte Carlo route. The T was clearly the better car, both for being narrower and having torque down low. I was "stuck" in the GT3 Touring for that section and offered to trade for the Carrera, but the other guy wasn't having any.
A map worth its weight in gold, and then some. A decade of notes on great sections scrawled all over it.
The gray mirrors just didn't work for me...
...but they looked a lot better on the white car. Suspect the same would be true on GT Silver.
Gray on the rear badging and grille...
You really see the rear spoiler out the back window—this is taken at head height and you do see it in the rearview mirror, unlike a regular 991.2 Carrera coupe.
Sorry this is a bit out of focus, but I have to say the gloss black door trim worked better in person than on the configurator.
Lightweight Gorilla Glass means no defroster. It can be deleted, and must be deleted if you want a rear wiper.
The "chase" cars.
I really dug the Sport-Tex, but its shiny nubs mean it's not as grippy as I want cloth seats to be.
I like a lot of colors, but every press trip has a "winner." While the GT3 Touring was all about black, white was the best color for the T. Wish GT Silver had been there...
...also wish one could delete the gray paint on the wheels and mirrors. But it's a nit for sure and some will like it. I'd own it with the optional five-spoke wheels on a GT Silver or White car.
Yes, things got dirty on the Monte Carlo route. The T was clearly the better car, both for being narrower and having torque down low. I was "stuck" in the GT3 Touring for that section and offered to trade for the Carrera, but the other guy wasn't having any.
A map worth its weight in gold, and then some. A decade of notes on great sections scrawled all over it.
#125
Drifting
Good Lord, man, you don't need to quote a post with 25 photos we've all just seen, especially just to say Nice Job. Have pity on your fellow Rennlisters and spare the Internet a little bandwidth.
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matthewlesko (11-23-2020)
#126
Rennlist Member
@Stout - Thanks so much for the photos of the T, you responded to my brake upgrade question on the similar thread in the GT3 forum so thank you for that as well. You are providing some really good personal insight to these cars, invaluable really.
Looking forward to the video once its posted.
Looking forward to the video once its posted.
#127
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Fantastic photos, thank you @stout! I agree with you regarding White and the optional 5-spoke wheels. I wish GT Silver was present at the event. I'm struggling between those two colors. I just don't know how GT Silver + Agate accents would look? I feel that the accents would be washed out and look out of place possibly? I know it pops quite nicely on White.
Side note 1 - I've been reading through issue 3 of 000 and it seems you predicted the arrival of the Carrera T with your F22.2 concept! They are pretty similar in spec! Coincidence?
Side note 2 - 000 is phenomal. Extremely pleased with its quality and depth. Will definitely be subscribing!
Side note 1 - I've been reading through issue 3 of 000 and it seems you predicted the arrival of the Carrera T with your F22.2 concept! They are pretty similar in spec! Coincidence?
Side note 2 - 000 is phenomal. Extremely pleased with its quality and depth. Will definitely be subscribing!
Side note 1: Total coincidence. We heard some rumblings as we went to print and I made a call to see if we needed to pull our story if it was going to make us look stupid after it hit mailboxes, but I was told the T, whatever it was, would debut well after that issue. It did, and shocked me...particularly the pinstripe seats! Eerie. I will say there are elements of the T that I like better than our F22.2 concept, mainly mechanical, but I still like our wheel choice, front bumper mesh, and exhaust setup....
Side note 2: Thank you for the kind words, and business!
Stout - do you happen to have any other pictures of the interior gloss trim? That's the one thing I just can't put my figure on with the interior config -- how does it all hang together, is the gloss black subtle (a good accent) or in your face...really hard to tell on the configurator.
My take is I hated the way the gloss black stuff looked on the configurator, but liked it quite a bit with the full leather with all the silver stitching. Not sure what I would do on a non-leather interior. Also, it fingerprints quite easily and gets hairline scratches when it gets wiped clean. So consider that, too. I wish the dark gray anodized brushed aluminum was an option...
You're welcome. I wasn't sure how interesting they'd be...
You're welcome. Funny thing is, while movers and shakers at PCNA and PAG watch Rennlist (from engineers to product planners to designers to PR) and "get it," the companies hired to determine "media value" assign zero value to forums like Rennlist as well as social media. I find this very 2008 (or 1998?) and also very curious, given that the real customers are here to discuss real purchase decisions as opposed to the tiny percentage of Porsche customers and potential Porsche customers using many traditional and big-name media platforms. Yes, Rennlisters may be only one stripe of Porsche customers, but they are surely among the most loyal—and they are also opinion leaders and culture ambassadors. So I'm doing a bit of an experiment to see if we can shift the tables and change the "media value" game up. I have no idea if it will have any impact whatsoever, and don't really expect it to, but I guess Rennlist benefits with free content along the way.
#130
Racer
Same place but six months earlier, June 2017. Col du Turini. The famous Monte Stage. In the background is my pal Clive in his 911 SC that he calls Jaffa. We spent five days and did over 1400kms on this magical run.
#131
[The Carrera T] was also the better car on the Monte Carlo route, and several attempts to trade the GT3 Touring for the T I was paired with for the day came to naught. Its (very good) driver knew that it was the better car on those narrow, rock-faced cliffy roads, being nearly 2 inches narrower and possessing low-end torque the GT3 Touring just doesn't.
#132
Originally Posted by Es macht nichts
This is the most impressive passage of the thread to me. And I’m saying this as someone with a 2018 GT3 MT on the way.
#133
#134
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
I am in the same boat. I expected the Touring to just demolish the T based on the insane fervor around the .2 GT3, while feeling like Porsche was just trying to throw a bone to its customers who couldn't get a GT-allocation and try to package a base Carrera as something special. Two things that I've picked up here is that hype can be different from reality and just because something is hard to get does not just make it the better car in all circumstances (which is what I likely subconsciously believed), and it's amazing to read how awesome the T was on these types of roads stacked against the new GT3 Touring. Some say that the GT3 is the last true "Carrera" for the MT + NA engine but I'm glad to see Porsche still making great 911s that need to be experienced first hand before judging. What's funny is I wonder if a base C2 had been part of this is how different or well it would have done with the T and Touring as well (not sure if Pete touched on that).
#135
RL Community Team
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
You're welcome. Funny thing is, while movers and shakers at PCNA and PAG watch Rennlist (from engineers to product planners to designers to PR) and "get it," the companies hired to determine "media value" assign zero value to forums like Rennlist as well as social media. I find this very 2008 (or 1998?) and also very curious, given that the real customers are here to discuss real purchase decisions as opposed to the tiny percentage of Porsche customers and potential Porsche customers using many traditional and big-name media platforms. Yes, Rennlisters may be only one stripe of Porsche customers, but they are surely among the most loyal—and they are also opinion leaders and culture ambassadors. So I'm doing a bit of an experiment to see if we can shift the tables and change the "media value" game up. I have no idea if it will have any impact whatsoever, and don't really expect it to, but I guess Rennlist benefits with free content along the way.
Stories sell. And yet the "stories" pushed out in the media platforms (social and otherwise) through the official channels is fake, written by product planners and the like. And people see that. They smell the inauthenticity and the marketing fluff and turn away. Whereas the Stories told here by actual owners are real, and as a result quite compelling.
Very short sighted and likely because it's not so easily quantified.