our cars vs gt3 rs
#1
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
our cars vs gt3 rs
There was a thread recently about our cars vs a Nissan...
A friend has an allocation for a new gt3 rs. ? do I have any hope of keeping up?
I have Motons, H&R sways, lowered, camber -2 all around, LWFW, UMW Stage 2, 100 cell race cats, extra oil coolers, recaro poles.
Any suggestions? larger wheels/weight loss help? should I try what 2wd feels like? do I need to spend any more money?
A friend has an allocation for a new gt3 rs. ? do I have any hope of keeping up?
I have Motons, H&R sways, lowered, camber -2 all around, LWFW, UMW Stage 2, 100 cell race cats, extra oil coolers, recaro poles.
Any suggestions? larger wheels/weight loss help? should I try what 2wd feels like? do I need to spend any more money?
#2
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
I think at some point it has more to do with the driver than the car. I pass plenty of 6GT3s, 7Gt3 and today, GT3RS. I have been passed by 993 N/A. Go figure.
Greg H.
Greg H.
#3
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Hi Greg,
I agree about the driver thing but unfortunately, I'm not sure I'm a better driver and having a faster car sure makes things easier!
Ryojo
I agree about the driver thing but unfortunately, I'm not sure I'm a better driver and having a faster car sure makes things easier!
Ryojo
#4
Addict
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
During a 1 lap sprint, I put 6 seconds on the fastest driven 997GT3RS with my car at close to 1400kgs and with street GT2 bodywork (unlike the avatar). I run at 1 Bar.
I had better tires than him and our track is quite fast and 5.4kms. The GT3 driver is a Porsche AG certified instructor and Cup racer and much better driver than I am.
I had 265 front and 315 rear Hoosier R6, Moton Clubsport, -2.5 front camber, -2.3 rear. He sold his car the next day after owning it for 2 weeks and got a GT2.
I had better tires than him and our track is quite fast and 5.4kms. The GT3 driver is a Porsche AG certified instructor and Cup racer and much better driver than I am.
I had 265 front and 315 rear Hoosier R6, Moton Clubsport, -2.5 front camber, -2.3 rear. He sold his car the next day after owning it for 2 weeks and got a GT2.
#5
Three Wheelin'
During a 1 lap sprint, I put 6 seconds on the fastest driven 997GT3RS with my car at close to 1400kgs and with street GT2 bodywork (unlike the avatar). I run at 1 Bar.
I had better tires than him and our track is quite fast and 5.4kms. The GT3 driver is a Porsche AG certified instructor and Cup racer and much better driver than I am.
I had 265 front and 315 rear Hoosier R6, Moton Clubsport, -2.5 front camber, -2.3 rear. He sold his car the next day after owning it for 2 weeks and got a GT2.
I had better tires than him and our track is quite fast and 5.4kms. The GT3 driver is a Porsche AG certified instructor and Cup racer and much better driver than I am.
I had 265 front and 315 rear Hoosier R6, Moton Clubsport, -2.5 front camber, -2.3 rear. He sold his car the next day after owning it for 2 weeks and got a GT2.
I've only been had the opportunity to pass a GT3RS once and I passed it but to be fair we aren't comparing apples to apples. A heavily track prepped 993tt with an "ok" driver will make quick work of just about anything
#6
Addict
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Lifetime Rennlist
Member
Spartan, thanks my lap was a lap record so everything went well that day.
On Dunlop slicks my car was setup at 2.3 deg camber by the same engineer of Bergmeister's 997 Cup S that uses the same tires in FIA GT3. Seems like this is what works best on these tires, Hoosiers worked well at similar setups. BTW the sizes I gave above were for my Sport Cups, I apologize, the R6 I was running were 245/40 Fr and 335/30 rear.
A well prepared (heavily modified) 993TT can give many of the new cars, even prepared, a run for their money, as long as they are short races because the older cars get the driver tired comparatively speaking to the new generations, since you will be driving at the limit to be fast, then when heat soaks in, watercooled cars keep the same pace effortlessly while aircooled tend to loose some performance.
On Dunlop slicks my car was setup at 2.3 deg camber by the same engineer of Bergmeister's 997 Cup S that uses the same tires in FIA GT3. Seems like this is what works best on these tires, Hoosiers worked well at similar setups. BTW the sizes I gave above were for my Sport Cups, I apologize, the R6 I was running were 245/40 Fr and 335/30 rear.
A well prepared (heavily modified) 993TT can give many of the new cars, even prepared, a run for their money, as long as they are short races because the older cars get the driver tired comparatively speaking to the new generations, since you will be driving at the limit to be fast, then when heat soaks in, watercooled cars keep the same pace effortlessly while aircooled tend to loose some performance.
#7
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Thanx for the responses! Reconfirmed my belief that our cars are a good platform for keeping up with the newer cars. Seems I may need some more hp and loose a little wt ... Looking forward to next year's driving season, lots of rain right now in Vancouver and all I can do is day dream. Thinking about a lithium battery and removing my door panels!
Trending Topics
#8
Race Director
When I was at Thunderhill, my instructor (Brandon Krause) drove my Ruf BTR to 1.97 minute lap time. That's pretty good even for GT3RSs.
So yeah, given equal drivers, we can hang with them. If you have a BIG track, our HP and especially TQ advantages, would shine even more.
CP
So yeah, given equal drivers, we can hang with them. If you have a BIG track, our HP and especially TQ advantages, would shine even more.
CP
#10
Hehe. You must be quite a driver Jean. I've passed quite a few RS's but prolly only because they weren't driven well. I have a heck of a time running w/ a buddy driving his stock z06 on hoosiers. But then I run r888's and he's raced 20+ years.
#11
Three Wheelin'
Why on earth are you running R888's at the track?! Thats just wrong
Last edited by Spartan; 11-08-2009 at 03:53 PM.
#13
Burning Brakes
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Orange Park Acres, CA
Posts: 982
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
You didn't mention what spring rates your running. The RS are still pretty soft and you have the edge on torque. Unless your friend is Walter Rohrl, my odds are 70/30 for you.
#14
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
My spring rates are pretty conservative, it's still +50% street car. Front 200lb tender/457lb main, rear 200lb tender/629lb main. They tighten up nicely when I adjust the moton cs, I have them full soft for the street and about mid position compression all around for the track. I find the amount of roll in the corners acceptable, don't know how things would be if stiffer. I know I don't like the motons turned up too much, especially in the rear or I start to struggle with oversteer.
#15
Burning Brakes
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Orange Park Acres, CA
Posts: 982
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
My spring rates are pretty conservative, it's still +50% street car. Front 200lb tender/457lb main, rear 200lb tender/629lb main. They tighten up nicely when I adjust the moton cs, I have them full soft for the street and about mid position compression all around for the track. I find the amount of roll in the corners acceptable, don't know how things would be if stiffer. I know I don't like the motons turned up too much, especially in the rear or I start to struggle with oversteer.