pmarkow:
reginos:
pmarkow:
reginos:
pmarkow:
reginos:
pmarkow:
reginos:
I love how the GT2RS looks. It creates the same impression as the 993 GT2 back in the 90s.
A GT Silver car with the Weissach paket line along the bonnet and roof looks fantastic.
This car looks like the fully functional speed machine which it is and it offers something completely different to the other 700 PS cars from Italy and the UK which follow the known and repeated pattern.
really funny statement......is there any more 'known and repeated pattern' than 911s?
I should have said configuration or perhaps layout and styling.
The 911 (whether we like it or we think this is justified or not) is a legend among cars, a piece of automotive history, the archetypical sportscar and road car based racing car.
The success of the 911 is the envy of any sportscar manufacturer. It would have been stupid for Porsche to stop the evolution of this model, despite sarcasms and ironies.
I.000.000 buyers since the 60s cannot be wrong.
there are many examples in history where millions of people were wrong.
.....but in the case of a product, not for such a length of time.
i own a 911 myself but i need to be put under enormous pressure to say it is a good-looking car, i try to keep good taste in spite of my ridiculous investment in porsche. but it is a useless discussion. the hundreds of 911 configurations sell mainly because people believe they buy sporty individualism with it. i find that pretty funny .......
Even detractors like you see the worth 
not enough though to spend tons of money for a GT2RS with dyson-type sound and GT3RS looks
I agree that it is very expensive given the platform it is based on. But since there is effective demand for it, Porsche are understandably cashing in.
The GT2RS is on the list of die-hard Porschephiles and multiple car owners, as expected but it will also be bought by people who are fed up with the "exotic supercar template" that is used by everyone from humble Audi upwards.
honestly reginos, i do not understand what you mean by 'exotic supercar template'. by some very good engineering reasons (which we all know) supercars are mid-engined - they do not have the 2 adults + 2 children space requirement of the original 911 concept, artificially kept alive by porsche - partly because they have succeeded in persuading their conservative clientele that that is what a sportscar should look like, partly because of their engineering laziness and partly out of fear they could loose their icon. and clearly, mid-engined cars have special design requirements. so????
Porsche and Mercedes could have entered this segment very easily and at least as convincingly as the current "exotic" manufacturers. For example, Porsche could have done a scaled down 918 in a weekend, so to speak. It is not a matter of lack of know-how. And equally Mercedes with their engineering prowess.
IMO it is good commercially that they have decided to deviate from the norm and offer alternative products built in their own respective ethos, like the GT2RS and the AMG GT-R (7.10,9
). Similarly, Audi could have done a modern day Quattro and be unique instead of the current poor man's Lamborghini (no offense intended to anyone
).
Not everyone fancies the wide and low, mid-engined exotics with their large behind and short front, the glass engine covers and the shapes out of a sci-fi comic book. There are many more opportunities in this automotive stratosphere which Porsche are exploiting superbly.
--
"Form follows function"