| Le
Mans-bred technology and race car styling should propel Prosche's new
558bhp stromer to the head of the supercar elite.
The brief given to the hand-picked team of designers and engineers by
Porsche chairman Wendelin Wiedeking was straight to the point. Take the
firms aborted Le Mans race car and transform it into a world-beating
road car. The Carrera GT is the amazing result.
Shrouded in secrecy right up to its unveiling at the Louvre in Paris on
September 28, the uncompromising V10-powered two-seater aims to establish
a standard of performance beyond the reach of todays supercar elite
when it is launched in 2003 at a likely price of £400,000 (Rs 2.8
crore).
Not since the Ferrari F50 entered the fray five years ago has a car boasted
such a celebrated competition background, nor carried such a large weight
of expectation, as this spectacular newcomer.
If you accept Porsches early claims, the Carrera GT will scorch
its way to 100kph in under four seconds, reach 192kph in less than 10
seconds and break the magic 320kph barrier flat out in sixth gear
Based
on the mysteriously mothballed 2000 Le Mans challenger, it aims to bring
the driver close to a full-blown race car experience while retaining a level
of comfort similar to Porsches Boxster and 911.
Only Porsche
could hope to flaunt its race-winning tradition at the 24-hour classic with
such abandon. Yes, we have seen Porsches race cars made fit for the
road before, the latest being the brazen 911 GT1 which thundered on to the
scene in 1997. However, it was little more than a thinly-veiled racer without
the sponsorship decals and was produced in tiny numbers to satisfy regulations.
The Carrera GT, on the other hand, has been developed first and foremost
as a road car and is earmarked for limited production over several years.
There
are no concessions to race car homologation, says August Achleitner,
the cars softly spoken project leader.
Departing from a long and illustrious history of horizontally opposed
six-cylinder power, Porsches latest road racer runs a new all-alloy
V10 engine originally developed for competition use but detuned to make
it suitable for everyday driving and to ensure it conforms to stringent
European Union emissions standards. The naturally
aspirated unit mounted directly to the rear bulkhead boasts a 5.5-litre
capacity and delivers a 911 GT1-slaying 558bhp.
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| Porsche
claims a hefty 558bhp and 62kgm from 5.5-litreV10 |
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The Carrera
GTs flamboyant yet flawed predecessor managed 544bhp from just 3.1
litres with the help of a pair of KKK blowers. However, its inherent turbo
lag and narrow powerband made it virtually impossible to drive in certain
conditions. With a massive 62kgm of torque, the new engine promises far
greater tractability and a much broader spread of useable power.
Porsche wont go into details about its new powerplant prior to it
gaining final production approval, but does reveal that it is extremely
compact at just 570mm in length, achieved by doing without integrated cylinder
liners, using a coating of nickel and silicon instead.
The 68-degree unit boasts four valves per cylinder, four chain-driven overhead
camshafts, titanium conrods and forged aluminium pistons. Electronic mapping
and injection timing are taken care of by the latest Bosch Motronic management
system, while dry-sump lubrication is used for reliable scavenging of the
oil.
The cut-out is set at 8200rpm, which seems conservative for a thoroughly
modern engine with such exotic internals.
In bench testing weve taken it over 10,000rpm, says Thomas
Ludenbach, the young German credited with engineering the new engine. But
at that level the durability of the valvegear begins to come into question. |