For decades now, the Porsche 911 has been lusted after by enthusiasts around the world. The model has expanded greatly from the early days, and there are now a staggering 22 different variations on the market. These range from the base 911 Carrera to the 640 hp Turbo S that starts at $230k before options.
911 models and trim levels vary with each generation, but the essentials remain the same: rear-mounted engine, incredible handling, and a flat-6 engine that sounds like nothing else. If you are looking for a track-ready 911, Porsche is happy to oblige with the GT3 model. For those who want something even more extreme – such as today’s featured Member – there’s the GT3RS.
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Today’s featured Autopian, RMcG, is retired and currently living in Toronto. Over the years, he has become very familiar with all of the iterations of the GT3RS, and currently owns three of them! Along with several other cars that we will spend less time with.
How did you get into cars?
As a kid I was into toy cars and had model cars that were completely unavailable in Ireland and also economically. However, cars were relatively expensive and we only had one intermittently. My first occasion behind a wheel was when I was about 12 in a very old column shift Humber Sceptre. We never had a car less than 10 year old.
One day a magnificent car came by and pulled into a house down the street. A young guy stepped out and saw me staring at the car and asked if I wanted to sit in it. My first exotic experience…a Facel Vega. I had never seen anything like it, and the sound of the Chrysler-sourced V8 was amazing.
My first new car was a 1979 Toyota Celica which was a rock-solid reliable car, but the massive amounts of salt in Quebec reduced it to a sieve of bodywork in four years. I followed with a new Honda Prelude which was also reliable and had a lovely five-speed gearbox. Eventually, I got into BMW, culminating with a V10 BMW M6. More on that later.
What’s in the garage currently?
- 2002 Mercedes-Benz SL500
- 3x GT3RS
- 2022 Porsche Cayenne GTS
- Panamera Sport Turismo
- Jeep Wrangler
- Smart ForTwo
How does the SL500 fit in?
My wife was a long-term Mercedes driver and in 2002 I decided to get her the then-new R230SL as a birthday gift. I do not think of it as a sports car but as a two-seat cruiser, immensely comfortable and well-finished. I deleted the wood trim and specced proper interior, panorama glass and general comfort items. It has held up very well.
How is the Panamera ST Turbo?
I never liked the appearance of the Panamera until the Sport Turismo appeared which created a much more balanced design. At 550bhp the Turbo was not the most powerful compared to the hybrid but the performance was similar due to the lighter weight.
I was clearly in the minority in liking it as it did not make a reappearance with the current models. I spec’d the car for long-distance travel with a focus on comfort and it has been driven through Germany to Denmark, across the US, and even on track.
The car is not huge inside, strictly a four-seater but is very sure-footed at speed and 300 km/h runs on an empty autobahn leave it utterly unruffled. While the hatchback does provide more space it is not a true station wagon and is too low for a large dog.
I have driven it across desert trails in Arizona. The adjustable air suspension has a high more but only maintains height at very low speeds which can be disconcerting. As usual with Porsche, the interior is beautifully finished.
Driving a Panamera at Spa is surreal. It holds the track much better than a large sedan should. The limiter is weight and the brakes do tend to overheat, resulting in a number of cooldown periods. The less demanding speeds on the Nürburgring are much less stressful on the car and it is well capable of repeated laps.
Overall there have been few maintenance issues over 70,000km, almost all under warranty. The 21” wheels are very easy to kerb and I have had some scrapes but there have been no issues that took it off the road.
What led to the Cayenne GTS?
Having a Great Dane, I need an SUV for transport. Hence the Cayenne. When the V8 returned to the GTS in 2022, I was in the market to replace my Cayenne S which had 320,000km on it. I wanted the V8, and the GTS generally has a reasonable base spec. Adding torque vectoring, full leather, and a Burmeister sound system ups the ante but results in a great all-purpose comfortable hauler.
While the vehicle is more than capable of offroading in the desert, I learned from the previous Cayenne that while the trip may be successful the cost of repairing damaged rocker panels and massive paint scrapes mean that only reasonably clear trails are advisable. Which brings me to the Jeep.
The Jeep Wrangler JK
It seems to me that just about every Jeep commercial is in Arizona or Utah. With a winter home there, the Jeep just seems to fit into the landscape perfectly. It is objectively a terrible vehicle. Leisurely road performance, wind noise, worst headlights of any car in my life, subpar heating, and torturous back seats for passengers. Yet, for charging around the back trails it is just perfect. The narrow body is protected by the big plastic wings, parts are cheap, and who cares about the odd dent? I have been through five windshields, several bumpers, a fuel tank, and a bunch of tires.
Now for the GT3s. How did you end up with the first one?
I was a dyed-in-the-wool BMW fan until the M6. Man, was this thing quick. (See flat-out video here.) Quick on the autobahn, that is. I decided to track it at the Nürburgring. My instructor was impressed with the torque but thought it was underbaked and too heavy for the Nürburgring.
“You need a GT3”, he said. My interest in Porsches was zero at the time. He wanted me to get some lap time and had a buddy with a track-prepared 996 GT3. The Ring is intimidating enough but when you get into a taut track car with a professional driver it is a different experience. I immediately got the car, the responsiveness, the brilliant steering, and the feeling that it was exactly right for the track.
On the way back to Canada I picked up a copy of an English magazine called Total 911. There was a cover article on the brand-new 997 GT3RS, I had to have the car. The new M6 was a lovely GT but nothing like this. Knowing nothing about Porsches I strolled into the local dealership and said: “ I’d like to order a GT3RS please”.
The sales representative politely informed me they were all sold. So I asked her to order the next year’s model. “They’re all sold too”. This was a sad day. I continued to drop into the dealer and see the very few RS that were going through, filled with RS lust. One day I got a call. “I just had a cancellation but it will be gone in 15 minutes. If you want it you need to make the call now.” Sold.
My first RS was Viper Green, the least popular color but the one I would have ordered. This was in the days when Porsche did not load the car with stability control or electric steering. The Mezger engine is unburstable. It rattles like a bucket of bolts at idle, but screams at high revs! It has a very heavy clutch and perfect steering. To me, it really defines the term “driver’s car.”
My only regret was that I had not been able to do factory delivery. Six months after picking it up in Toronto I shipped it back to Germany and decided to campaign it at the Nürburgring and also a nearby Spa, a vastly quicker track.
In dry conditions, the 997.1 RS is a wonder – perfectly responsive, completely analog, but the lack of driver aids means that if it comes unstuck, it happens very quickly. I had a harmless spin at Spa when I overcooked it on my second lap. A week and a set of Michelin Cups later we were still in one piece and the car returned to Canada.
You had a 997.2 as well?
When the rumours of the car surfaced I decided to get one, and this time called my dealer and got on her list immediately!
I specced the car with lightweight buckets, 90 90-litre tank, and a very rare option of a thicker steering wheel. Factory delivery. Unlike the current buckets these folded which meant some reasonable luggage space.
Factory pickup was efficient and friendly; a visit to the museum, a tour of the factory, lunch and off for a little touring down to Prague to put some miles on the car. At normal road speeds it is very similar to the 997.1 but at very high speeds the downforce is immediately evident.
On track it is definitely more dialed in, faster, and of course with stability control there is more confidence. When I got to the Ring I asked Sabine Schmitz, whom I knew, to drive the car.
Driving with a great professional driver is always an experience. Sabine did not correct, hit the right spot every time and just positioned the car with exquisite precision.
The dry days that week were perfect and the track was fairly rubbered-in as the Nürburgring 24-hour race had been the previous weekend. And then it rained. It was dark early evening and I came around a blind turn to come face to face with a Subaru that had spun. Missed him by paint thickness but I would have been less lucky in the older car.
I was coming back more carefully in the mounting darkness when a black Carrera GT came hauling passed in the rain. I was impressed with his car control (the CGT is not easy to drive in my experience), but later when I was in the parking lot I saw the car on a truckbed, one rear wheel folded under it. That’s life at the Ring.
I had a space problem at the time as I really wanted the 991RS and sadly let the 7.2 go, something I still regret.
What came next?
When the next generation 991 was unveiled, I had to have it. The 991 was a huge change for Porsche, bigger car, completely new body, engine, transmission, steering. I ordered it, with factory delivery with the Weissach package. 500bhp and a significant revision to the body, plus a lot more aero.
I took it to the Ring, and the Nordschleife was closed for fog. My instructor knew that the F1 track was open so I had an opportunity to try things there that I would not dare to do on the big track. The Nordschleife has almost no runoff areas while the F1 track is much more forgiving.
This gave me the opportunity to do things that would normally put the car into the wall, deliberately turning in too early, for instance, lifting off and so on. The car was just rock solid and when the stability control kicked in it was progressive and quick.
There have been endless arguments about PDK vs Manual transmissions. I am comfortable with both, and I cannot shift a manual faster than PDK. The 991RS is also a very practical road car and is my default choice if I just want a responsive and reasonably comfortable road car.
And how’s the newest one?
The new car is currently somewhere on the Atlantic on its way back to Germany as I couldn’t get Euro delivery. It is yet to have its maiden trip to the Nürburgring which will occur early September. I will be attending International Porsche Days again and then taking it to the track.
First impressions:
Totally impractical as a road car. No luggage space, unadjustable buckets, no front trunk, not even a glove compartment.
The wheels sit proudly outside of the bodywork, especially in front, and spit stones up on the car. I had triple PPF put on the more affected areas.
As a track car, it has more adjustability than any road-legal car I have ever seen, with active aero, and adjustable suspension from the steering wheel. The underneath of the car is a mass of blades and grooves, there is a high single front radiator that directs air through the hood and over the roof to the massive rear wing. It is hugely stable in normal road conditions but will take some learning due to the aero vs mechanical grip.
Thanks RMcG!
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Wow, these are amazing and this was a great article! Enjoy reading the stories. Love the Great Dane
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for reading!
Really cool collection! The SL500 has really held up well for its age.
How the fuck is there not a paragraph on the Smart when you have Mercedes on staff?! Was it too poor for this article?
Haha that’s on me, I asked him about it but I just didn’t feel there was anything to say that hasn’t already been said.
Ok, I am definitely jealous. Not so much because of the cars—I have my fun at least a decimal below—but because this member got to ride the ‘ring with Sabine. That’s just livin right!
3 GT3s and a Smart car
Right?! I’m so jealous of this one but dang it’s awesome!
Of course. She was the Queen.
This is the kind of member garage that directly strikes envy in the hearts of the normal underprivileged, working class, and most of the readership here. Respect, but also.
This is a 1% garage. Very few of us have the luxury of several spares, let alone some spare GT3RS’ hanging out in the barn for fun.
I’m not the jealous type, I just think this is kinda flashy for a member garage. The owner is obviously an enthusiast based on the choices.
This garage is worth more than the houses most of us live in. Easily.
Yes, and I completely agree. The cars in my driveway right now are maybe worth $20k, but I like to try to feature some of everything. Last week was a conversion van and a Prius, this week was crazy awesome. The Autopian brings together people from every walk of life and all should be celebrated.
This reader(not a member yet) has a garage of a Hyundai Elantra and a Honda CR-V. The basics of the suburban family garage.
Busted Chevy Cruze and a Sienna here.
Kona N and a 2015 CRV
It also serves as an acute example of just how bad inequality has become. Probably 90% of people can barely afford a single new car right now. Meanwhile the 1% can have spare GT3 RSs like the rest of us have spare t shirts. This is a cool collection, but it’s also a very glutinous one and I think featuring it on this site is a bit tone deaf. It’s better suited to being shown off on social media for the conspicuous consumption crowd to fawn over.
No more tone deaf than the articles about the multimillionaire backer of the site taking the writers to parties with British royalty or whatever.
I’d rather read about the cars of the commenters, no matter how nice (or not). So far I think it’s been a nice mix.
Appreciate that! I’ve been trying to grab some of everything. And I agree, I think it’s cool to show how vast this community is.
For what it’s worth, when I first got into motorsports years back, I was at an autocross when a young guy in a Ferrari 355 pulled up. Of course, SCCA being SCCA, all the myriad crusty old dudes scoffed, muttered comments, and basically studiously ignored him. After a few runs, I saw him confusedly staring at the results board, so I went over to talk to him. I’ll admit, a decent part of it was I wanted to see more of the type of car that had previously existed solely as automotive porn for me.
But we chatted about things, I offered my experiences for what they were worth, and whadda know, he was a cool guy – he’d started a business as a teenager, built it up over the years, hired people, etc. and had thrived. Then he’d finally bought the kind of car he’d always wanted. Over the course of the event, we’d talk in between heats, and he was super excited he was doing better each time. It was clear he truly loved cars.
Later than night, I remember thinking if I were in his situation, would I have done any different?
I legitimately would not do something like own 3 GT3s. I think it’s a bit wasteful. I also could have chosen to take multiple paths along the way that had decent odds to land me substantial wealth and chose not to pursue them. Not to brag or anything, but my dad owns a very successful architecture firm and my cousin/his dad who passed a while back are very high up Merrill Lynch and have a lot of connections on Wall Street.
Hoarding wealth just isn’t a goal of mine. I’d rather do something I’m passionate about that makes a difference and make decent money than do the type of stuff that gets you entry into the 1% because there’s no ethical way to get that rich. I’m very content with what I have. It would be cool to have a little more money to throw at cars, but just being able to afford what I have is a blessing and I have other financial priorities.
Anyway even if I was absurdly wealthy I wouldn’t have a bunch of cars. I’d probably have a single custom 911 or 718, a comfortable and efficient daily (probably a PHEV luxury sedan), and an AWD SUV for adventures and the snow. But I also wouldn’t ever be absurdly wealthy because I don’t want to be. My wife and I will likely inherit quite a bit of money later in life and we’re already talking about where we’d like to donate the majority of it.
At the end of the day conspicuous consumption just ain’t my thing.
I think you’re applying a lot of your own prejudices onto this guy who happens to be a Porsche enthusiast.
I don’t think prejudices is the word you’re looking for. Using it implies that there are greater societal forces at work harming the person you’re speaking out against. It’s appropriate in the context of oppressors making things worse for vulnerable populations. I don’t really think it applies here. I think using it the way you are kind of minimizes all of the very real and very harmful prejudice that’s out there.
I think it’s pretty reasonable to be frustrated with the fact that some people have multi million dollar toy collections while children are starving and the world is becoming uninhabitable…and I don’t think it’s some sort is stretch to assume where their priorities lie. No one with a 7 figure garage got to the point they’re at by making ethical, altruistic choices.
You’re doing the lord’s work.
A prejudice is a preconceived negative notion about a person or group, so no it’s being used correctly. This is a car enthusiast website, so the greater injustices of the world aren’t being affected in anyway by this discourse. This is an otherwise light and airy article Autopian does as a “perk” so to say and calling into question the members morality because of his choice of automobiles says more about you than him in my opinion.
I guess I don’t follow your reasoning here unless you’re calling your family unethical?
Among the things one can do with a lot of money, buying some cars is about the least offensive. It doesn’t hurt anyone, it doesn’t corner the market on anything other people need, hell it even creates more jobs than collecting art or buying bitcoins does.
Is someone with a 7 figure house or business unethical? If not, what makes cars different?
I think you’re off base on this one.
I disagree strongly with the choices people in my family have made and consider those choices unethical, yes. It’s one of the reasons why I went out and chose my own path rather than take a highly compensated seat at one of the tables. I disagree strongly with a lot of the choices they’ve made and I sit down with my dad and we talk about it quite frequently.
I’ve also had a lot of interesting and productive conversations about it with extended family as well. They all have different priorities than I do but when I explain where I’m coming from and why I make the decisions I make they understand. Some of them really struggle to reconcile what they’re doing.
This isn’t some act I put on when I’m shitposting. It’s kind of a core belief of mine. And I’ll elaborate a bit on your point re: a million dollar house or business. I actually don’t hate millionaires, successful entrepreneurs, etc. I also don’t begrudge the fact that people like brain surgeons who provide a vital, life saving resource are well compensated for their work. Folks with a net worth of a couple million can be big economic drivers if they’re conscientious with the choices they’re making.
I do begrudge the gratuitous hoarding of the 1%, however…because resources are finite and rapidly being used up. Even when it comes to a comparatively frivolous interest like cars…people keeping a garage full of 3 of the same car are artificially making the market less favorable for regular people. There was a time not that long ago when a regular Joe could afford a secondhand 911 that wasn’t completely roached out.
The same goes for hoarding money, property, etc. I don’t think I need to elaborate on the fact that it doesn’t trickle down. I’m fine with people being well off. I’m less okay with people being so well off that it starts to harm others. And we haven’t even gotten into the climate change implications of having a bunch of homes, cars, traveling between all of it, etc.
I’m not actually here to argue and kind of regret not taking a slightly softer tone in my earlier comments. Sorry for the rambling, but we usually have pretty interesting discussions here and I wanted to elaborate a bit on where I’m coming from. I think folks sometimes see me and assume WOW JEALOUS ANGRY TERMINALLY ONLINE LEFTIST (not you or anyone else here necessarily) but it’s not really that simple/I actually resent a lot of those sorts of folks.
I appreciate your perspective on wealth as someone with a lot more exposure to it up close than most of us (myself definitely included).
I think our disconnect here is that I don’t see a person who buys a couple Porsches as automatically being “so well off that it starts to harm others”.
I think the question of someone’s morality is almost 100% divorced from the cars they own. I’ve met people with $20 million worth of cars in their garage that would give you the shirt off their back, and I’ve met shitbox owners who are the biggest assholes around. I know guys with lifted trucks that do volunteer work, I know EV owners that don’t give a shit about the climate, and so on.
I wonder if the backlash to this particular post is more about keeping multiples of the same (new-ish) car, because I don’t recall anything similar when Ferraris, Aston Martins, and so on have been featured before in members’ driveways. Put another way, if this guy had the same value tied up in a different set of cars, would the reaction have been the same? I wonder.
‘Winter home’ and buying a Mercedes ‘as a gift’ for your wife are simply not in my vocabulary. Seems a little tone deaf on this site as others have said.
There are also infinite spaces for uber wealthy enthusiasts to inhabit. There aren’t as many for the regular folks. This is one of the last good ones.
And yet you piss about here judging the other members and let everyone know you are better because you have the “correct” set of priorities.
This is a web based car community where everyone are welcome and “member’s rides” is a series of articles showing off and highlighting the rides of the members here.
I am also curious about how you can own that many cool cars,and I would love to have the opportunity myself,but I don’t think we should comment on the life choices of the other members,as we have no business to do so.
Good on you for having five fucking Porches and doing cool stuff with your life,I clearly picked the wrong career:-)
Maybe…but this site is a place for all auto enthusiasts. I will never be able to afford 3 GT3’s (unless the lottery pulls through), but I do enjoy seeing what other people in this world have, and that includes those with income well beyond my own. This is a site for automotive interests, so I don’t feel like gatekeeping is something we should practice.
This was my take on it too. Glad I’m not the only one.
It’s not like he’s being a braggart or something, it’s an enthusiast and supporter of the site’s garage and maybe not how I’d spec my garage but it’s his nonetheless.
That’s such a wonderfully evocative description of what the H6 engines sound like! To me, it always seems to slot somewhere between a blender full of gravel and a Messerschmitt fighter.
tell me you’re a Rich Corinthian Leather member without telling me, lol…an enjoyable read.
That’s… a pretty nice garage right there. That Wrangler feels comically out of place and that’s what I love about Autopians.
That and the smart both caught me off guard here. I feel like smarts are discussed a lot with Mercedes so I left that one off but yeah I couldn’t agree more