She's Goin To RUF!
#1
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She's Goin To RUF!
After pondering the plethora of HP upgrade options for our cars, and heeding the vast trial and error experiences of JJayB, I decided to give RUF USA a call today.
I had a long talk with Hans. It's going in a car carrier May 25th, to arrive at RUF May 29th. With that decision made, maybe tonight I can finally get a good night's sleep.
I had a long talk with Hans. It's going in a car carrier May 25th, to arrive at RUF May 29th. With that decision made, maybe tonight I can finally get a good night's sleep.
#3
Nordschleife Master
What are the details of your plan? How many miles on your engine... will you start with a total, split-the-case teardown? Ruf suspension? Ruf wheels? Spill the beans!
Congratulations
Congratulations
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Originally Posted by ca993twin
What are the details of your plan? How many miles on your engine... will you start with a total, split-the-case teardown? Ruf suspension? Ruf wheels? Spill the beans!
Congratulations
Congratulations
I am going to have them upgrade the rods, valve guides, and other week points in the motor. I only have 26,000 miles, so it should be in pretty good shape.
I already did the suspension, but I probably will get the wheels. I'm going to fly out early in the process. I may do some shopping while I'm there.
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Originally Posted by ttAmerica RoadsterAWD
Nice! You won't regret it! You'll be able to terrorize those new $230K Ferrari F430 jobs!
Jaime
Jaime
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#12
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Originally Posted by Tour18
Well, I know where I will be camping out for a week or two... Maybe I can do lots of photos while work is under way.
#13
Nordschleife Master
Craig,
Some other nifty Ruf goodies to consider (as long as you're in there):
RUF CTR bumpers
Ruf A-piller fairings
Ruf pedals
Ruf steering wheel
Ruf shift ****
Ruf logos
Ruf brakes (I wish I could afford these)
Ruf seats (I may get a pair of these used)
Ruf mirrors
Turbo S rear spoiler (as long as the paint gun is already out)
Gosh, its fun spending your money.
My car had a lot of miles when the conversion was done, so it went to bare case and all new parts. The LWF was tried, but the previous owner claimed stalling issues, so he went back to the dual mass (darn it). Your car is so new, it should need nothing but the upgrades. The previous owner had the Roock wheels and suspension taken off, and went with the Ruf wheels and Ruf suspension. And of course the Ruf oil cooler... which is probably mandatory with any turbo R conversion they do.
Best luck. Keep us posted of your plans.
Some other nifty Ruf goodies to consider (as long as you're in there):
RUF CTR bumpers
Ruf A-piller fairings
Ruf pedals
Ruf steering wheel
Ruf shift ****
Ruf logos
Ruf brakes (I wish I could afford these)
Ruf seats (I may get a pair of these used)
Ruf mirrors
Turbo S rear spoiler (as long as the paint gun is already out)
Gosh, its fun spending your money.
My car had a lot of miles when the conversion was done, so it went to bare case and all new parts. The LWF was tried, but the previous owner claimed stalling issues, so he went back to the dual mass (darn it). Your car is so new, it should need nothing but the upgrades. The previous owner had the Roock wheels and suspension taken off, and went with the Ruf wheels and Ruf suspension. And of course the Ruf oil cooler... which is probably mandatory with any turbo R conversion they do.
Best luck. Keep us posted of your plans.
#15
Race Director
Craig,
Congratulations. Are you doing the Turbo-R, or the CTR package?
Steve had given superb advise. Just a few more from my perspective.
(1) I'd consider titanium parts (con-rods etc.) It is not that much more in the overall scheme of things. I have those in my motor and it offers great peace of mind.
(2) If you do not have a LWF already, I'd do the RUF one. It actually is more a medium weight than a true LWF. No chatter, no stalls. But every Porsche mechanics who drove my car immediately recognized the difference.
(3) 130 Cell CATS: you don't have to do it at RUF, as Caludio (Foreign Sports in S. Cal, Tony can give you more input on this) can do that. But I'd switch out the OEM CAT cores for 130 cell cores. I did that recently and it greatly improved the throttle response and the sound. It also helps the longevity of the turbo. The RUF Motronics is mapped for race CATs.
I strongly second the notion of a Turbo S tail. It looks great, and the air-flow (engine cooling air) enhancement is icing on the cake. In additon, please consider the aero-kit (from splitters and side skirts). While we can really enjoy the aero-dynamic benefits (can hit those road speeds here), but they look so nice.
The last one is a hornet's nest: If I was going to do this mod, I'd send my car to RUF in Pheffenhausen in Germany. The conversion costs the same (I think), so the difference is the shipping cost. The trade off is that you have the long-proven workmenship, attention to detail, and QA protocol in Alois's house. In addition, you can drive the new beast all over European roads (that's the natural environment for a RUF) before you ship it back home. Once the car hits U.S. soil, good luck to seeing triple-digit cruising in your RUF. No disrespect meant for the Dallas shop, but I had to think that a conversion done in Germany is a better job at the end of the day.
Just my two cents. Good luck with this journey. It is going to be a LOT of fun.
CP
Congratulations. Are you doing the Turbo-R, or the CTR package?
Steve had given superb advise. Just a few more from my perspective.
(1) I'd consider titanium parts (con-rods etc.) It is not that much more in the overall scheme of things. I have those in my motor and it offers great peace of mind.
(2) If you do not have a LWF already, I'd do the RUF one. It actually is more a medium weight than a true LWF. No chatter, no stalls. But every Porsche mechanics who drove my car immediately recognized the difference.
(3) 130 Cell CATS: you don't have to do it at RUF, as Caludio (Foreign Sports in S. Cal, Tony can give you more input on this) can do that. But I'd switch out the OEM CAT cores for 130 cell cores. I did that recently and it greatly improved the throttle response and the sound. It also helps the longevity of the turbo. The RUF Motronics is mapped for race CATs.
I strongly second the notion of a Turbo S tail. It looks great, and the air-flow (engine cooling air) enhancement is icing on the cake. In additon, please consider the aero-kit (from splitters and side skirts). While we can really enjoy the aero-dynamic benefits (can hit those road speeds here), but they look so nice.
The last one is a hornet's nest: If I was going to do this mod, I'd send my car to RUF in Pheffenhausen in Germany. The conversion costs the same (I think), so the difference is the shipping cost. The trade off is that you have the long-proven workmenship, attention to detail, and QA protocol in Alois's house. In addition, you can drive the new beast all over European roads (that's the natural environment for a RUF) before you ship it back home. Once the car hits U.S. soil, good luck to seeing triple-digit cruising in your RUF. No disrespect meant for the Dallas shop, but I had to think that a conversion done in Germany is a better job at the end of the day.
Just my two cents. Good luck with this journey. It is going to be a LOT of fun.
CP