Daunting task to plan this. Taking delivery in Zuffenhausen Sept, 2018
#31
FWIW, and I hasten to stipulate that I am neither an expert nor have I any practical experience in this matter, I have however been spending a lot of time researching the ED/PPF combination in preparation for the possibility of my own ED. What I see out there so far is that there is considerable reason to want to execute a proper paint correction before applying partial or full PPF even on a new car off the factory floor, otherwise one risks spending money on protecting an inherently imperfect paint job. This is by no means to say that Porsche do a bad job of painting, they dont, but no manufacturer will spend the time, cost, labor and materials to ensure absolute perfection--it doesnt make sense--they'll take it as far as needed to satisfy 80-90% of their customers. Thus, a lot of the examples out there of what it truly takes to do a full PPF properly show many many hours spent on chemical and mechanical decontamination followed by layers of paint correction before one ever gets to the actual PPF application step--figure on 3-5 days for a brand new car. Right now, I am seriously contemplating the prospect of driving or even trucking the car to an installer and leaving it there for that length of time.
My point being, having invested a big chunk of money in your Porsche, it makes a lot of sense to protect the paintwork, but you had better be prepared to allocate the time and resources to make sure it's done right; if you are worried about minimizing the time away from your Porsche once it's delivered to you, I offer the opinion that you might be better off waiting till you get it back to the US and bring it to an installer then.
All that being said, its really your call!, and I hope I speak for many here in wishing you a spectacular ED experience!!
My point being, having invested a big chunk of money in your Porsche, it makes a lot of sense to protect the paintwork, but you had better be prepared to allocate the time and resources to make sure it's done right; if you are worried about minimizing the time away from your Porsche once it's delivered to you, I offer the opinion that you might be better off waiting till you get it back to the US and bring it to an installer then.
All that being said, its really your call!, and I hope I speak for many here in wishing you a spectacular ED experience!!
#32
FWIW, and I hasten to stipulate that I am neither an expert nor have I any practical experience in this matter, I have however been spending a lot of time researching the ED/PPF combination in preparation for the possibility of my own ED. What I see out there so far is that there is considerable reason to want to execute a proper paint correction before applying partial or full PPF even on a new car off the factory floor, otherwise one risks spending money on protecting an inherently imperfect paint job. This is by no means to say that Porsche do a bad job of painting, they dont, but no manufacturer will spend the time, cost, labor and materials to ensure absolute perfection--it doesnt make sense--they'll take it as far as needed to satisfy 80-90% of their customers. Thus, a lot of the examples out there of what it truly takes to do a full PPF properly show many many hours spent on chemical and mechanical decontamination followed by layers of paint correction before one ever gets to the actual PPF application step--figure on 3-5 days for a brand new car. Right now, I am seriously contemplating the prospect of driving or even trucking the car to an installer and leaving it there for that length of time.
My point being, having invested a big chunk of money in your Porsche, it makes a lot of sense to protect the paintwork, but you had better be prepared to allocate the time and resources to make sure it's done right; if you are worried about minimizing the time away from your Porsche once it's delivered to you, I offer the opinion that you might be better off waiting till you get it back to the US and bring it to an installer then.
All that being said, its really your call!, and I hope I speak for many here in wishing you a spectacular ED experience!!
My point being, having invested a big chunk of money in your Porsche, it makes a lot of sense to protect the paintwork, but you had better be prepared to allocate the time and resources to make sure it's done right; if you are worried about minimizing the time away from your Porsche once it's delivered to you, I offer the opinion that you might be better off waiting till you get it back to the US and bring it to an installer then.
All that being said, its really your call!, and I hope I speak for many here in wishing you a spectacular ED experience!!
#33
Rennlist Member
I slapped a cheap Xpel job on the car near the Ring.
Just the high impact areas. Did my 6000 miles and 20 track days, had it all ripped off, installed new rotors and pads. So it wouldn’t look too beat up and stock for importing to IS.
When the car came home did the paint correction and full wrap of the car.
Next year the car is 4 years old, it will be retired from track duty, ill refrub it and hopefully drive it till the end of days on the street.
New car is ready 11/18/18 but so disappointed I can only leave the car now for 3 months instead of the 6 months.
I’ve requested January pickup but I hope the car will be delayed or later allocation. Might even swap allocations with soneone
Just the high impact areas. Did my 6000 miles and 20 track days, had it all ripped off, installed new rotors and pads. So it wouldn’t look too beat up and stock for importing to IS.
When the car came home did the paint correction and full wrap of the car.
Next year the car is 4 years old, it will be retired from track duty, ill refrub it and hopefully drive it till the end of days on the street.
New car is ready 11/18/18 but so disappointed I can only leave the car now for 3 months instead of the 6 months.
I’ve requested January pickup but I hope the car will be delayed or later allocation. Might even swap allocations with soneone
#34
Drifting
Congrats! I'm picking up my car on Sept 21, so we will have similar travel plans. I go to this neck of the woods alot, 3rd time alone this year for my RS delivery. I have a few recommendations.
Baden Baden is a great place to visit. Beautiful town, spas are worth a visit. Plus its the beginning of Black Forest Highway which is a nice drive.
Munich: Oktoberfest is nice to see, however I never go anymore. As mentioned above, instead go to Cannstatter Volksfest in Stuttgart; same beerfest atmosphere, similar large tents with fun, however its much more enjoyable and doesn't suffer from the insane drunken masses as in Munich. My wife and friends always go to the Stuttgart festival now and have a blast. However, if you MUST see Oktoberfest in Munich, then I would recommend staying at a hotel by the airport and taking the Ubahn directly into Munich to see the sites. Its very convenient, less hassles with parking, and the hotels are cheaper. I always stay at the Hilton at Munich Airport when doing Oktoberfest. As for soccer, its definitely worth it. One option that's fun but more reasonably priced is to go to a TSV1860 Munich match. Can also hit a Stuttgart VfB game; stadium is next to Mercedes Benz museum and the large beerfest...I went to both a soccer game there and the Spring Stuttgart Beerfest this spring, very enjoyable.
PM me if interested in other ideas, I could take all day! I do all my vacationing in this area every year, its an amazing place. Southern Germany, Tyrol in Austria and Sud Tyrol in northern Italy are just stunning beautiful places to vacation, but more importantly drive in the amazing alpine passes!
Baden Baden is a great place to visit. Beautiful town, spas are worth a visit. Plus its the beginning of Black Forest Highway which is a nice drive.
Munich: Oktoberfest is nice to see, however I never go anymore. As mentioned above, instead go to Cannstatter Volksfest in Stuttgart; same beerfest atmosphere, similar large tents with fun, however its much more enjoyable and doesn't suffer from the insane drunken masses as in Munich. My wife and friends always go to the Stuttgart festival now and have a blast. However, if you MUST see Oktoberfest in Munich, then I would recommend staying at a hotel by the airport and taking the Ubahn directly into Munich to see the sites. Its very convenient, less hassles with parking, and the hotels are cheaper. I always stay at the Hilton at Munich Airport when doing Oktoberfest. As for soccer, its definitely worth it. One option that's fun but more reasonably priced is to go to a TSV1860 Munich match. Can also hit a Stuttgart VfB game; stadium is next to Mercedes Benz museum and the large beerfest...I went to both a soccer game there and the Spring Stuttgart Beerfest this spring, very enjoyable.
PM me if interested in other ideas, I could take all day! I do all my vacationing in this area every year, its an amazing place. Southern Germany, Tyrol in Austria and Sud Tyrol in northern Italy are just stunning beautiful places to vacation, but more importantly drive in the amazing alpine passes!
#35
Congrats! I'm picking up my car on Sept 21, so we will have similar travel plans. I go to this neck of the woods alot, 3rd time alone this year for my RS delivery. I have a few recommendations.
Baden Baden is a great place to visit. Beautiful town, spas are worth a visit. Plus its the beginning of Black Forest Highway which is a nice drive.
Munich: Oktoberfest is nice to see, however I never go anymore. As mentioned above, instead go to Cannstatter Volksfest in Stuttgart; same beerfest atmosphere, similar large tents with fun, however its much more enjoyable and doesn't suffer from the insane drunken masses as in Munich. My wife and friends always go to the Stuttgart festival now and have a blast. However, if you MUST see Oktoberfest in Munich, then I would recommend staying at a hotel by the airport and taking the Ubahn directly into Munich to see the sites. Its very convenient, less hassles with parking, and the hotels are cheaper. I always stay at the Hilton at Munich Airport when doing Oktoberfest. As for soccer, its definitely worth it. One option that's fun but more reasonably priced is to go to a TSV1860 Munich match. Can also hit a Stuttgart VfB game; stadium is next to Mercedes Benz museum and the large beerfest...I went to both a soccer game there and the Spring Stuttgart Beerfest this spring, very enjoyable.
PM me if interested in other ideas, I could take all day! I do all my vacationing in this area every year, its an amazing place. Southern Germany, Tyrol in Austria and Sud Tyrol in northern Italy are just stunning beautiful places to vacation, but more importantly drive in the amazing alpine passes!
Baden Baden is a great place to visit. Beautiful town, spas are worth a visit. Plus its the beginning of Black Forest Highway which is a nice drive.
Munich: Oktoberfest is nice to see, however I never go anymore. As mentioned above, instead go to Cannstatter Volksfest in Stuttgart; same beerfest atmosphere, similar large tents with fun, however its much more enjoyable and doesn't suffer from the insane drunken masses as in Munich. My wife and friends always go to the Stuttgart festival now and have a blast. However, if you MUST see Oktoberfest in Munich, then I would recommend staying at a hotel by the airport and taking the Ubahn directly into Munich to see the sites. Its very convenient, less hassles with parking, and the hotels are cheaper. I always stay at the Hilton at Munich Airport when doing Oktoberfest. As for soccer, its definitely worth it. One option that's fun but more reasonably priced is to go to a TSV1860 Munich match. Can also hit a Stuttgart VfB game; stadium is next to Mercedes Benz museum and the large beerfest...I went to both a soccer game there and the Spring Stuttgart Beerfest this spring, very enjoyable.
PM me if interested in other ideas, I could take all day! I do all my vacationing in this area every year, its an amazing place. Southern Germany, Tyrol in Austria and Sud Tyrol in northern Italy are just stunning beautiful places to vacation, but more importantly drive in the amazing alpine passes!
#37
#38
Race Car
Originally Posted by Randy M
22 or 23 if everything goes according to plan.
On Sunday there's going to be a lot of nice cars there because on Monday the Scuderia Hanseat course starts.
#39
#40
Race Car
Originally Posted by Randy M
What is the Scuderia Hanseat? Sounds like a German/Italian entree lol.
They been doing driver education on Nordschleife since 1958. It is a 3 day course that ends with an examination where you get judged by professional race drivers (most of them are).
1 to 10 points at each of the 22 or so points where the judges are positioned.
1 is terrible, 6 is OK, 10 is excellent.
One of few times when you actually can walk on the track and even drive it backwards.
#41
Agree - weird name
They been doing driver education on Nordschleife since 1958. It is a 3 day course that ends with an examination where you get judged by professional race drivers (most of them are).
1 to 10 points at each of the 22 or so points where the judges are positioned.
1 is terrible, 6 is OK, 10 is excellent.
One of few times when you actually can walk on the track and even drive it backwards.
They been doing driver education on Nordschleife since 1958. It is a 3 day course that ends with an examination where you get judged by professional race drivers (most of them are).
1 to 10 points at each of the 22 or so points where the judges are positioned.
1 is terrible, 6 is OK, 10 is excellent.
One of few times when you actually can walk on the track and even drive it backwards.
#42
Rennlist Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Atlanta, GA
Posts: 31
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I'm taking delivery of my GT3 the morning of September 20th and heading straight there for some tourist laps that evening. Would love to meet any fellow rennlister if anyone is around.
#43
Race Car
Originally Posted by Christian in Atl
I'm taking delivery of my GT3 the morning of September 20th and heading straight there for some tourist laps that evening. Would love to meet any fellow rennlister if anyone is around.
#44
I'm so flippin' pumped for this trip
#45
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
I picked my first 911 in Zuffenhausen in May 1993. I did the Scuderia Hanseat school the same week. Only spun once and hit nothing but bugs. Arrived at the 'Ring with just over 500 miles on the car and left four days later with over 900.
https://www.scuderia-hanseat.de/home/?L=3
https://www.scuderia-hanseat.de/home/?L=3