Porsche Club GB Region 12

Picture of By Craig Ranson
By Craig Ranson

Managing Director โ€“ Bridge Classic Cars

Today we had a visit from one of the members of the Region 12 Porsche Club GB with his beautiful 2000 Porsche GT3.

Source: Wikipedia

The “GT3” nameplate was introduced in 1999 as part of the first generation of theย Porsche 996ย model range (commonly known as 996.1). As with Porsche’s previous 911 RS models, the 996 GT3 was focused on racing, and so was devoid of items that added unnecessary weight to the car. Sound deadening was almost completely removed, as were the rear seats, rear loud speakers, sunroof, andย air conditioning, although automatic air conditioning and CD/radio became no-cost optional add-ons.

The engine of the 996 GT3 set it apart from most of the otherย Porsche 996ย models, although it shared the same basic design of the standard so-called “integratedย dry sump”ย flat-six engine. The engine isย naturally aspiratedand based on the unit used in theย Porsche 962ย andย Porsche 911 GT1ย race cars. That engine was known as the ‘Mezger’ engine, after its designerย Hans Mezger. The engine uses the originalย air-cooledย 911’s versatileย dry-sumpย crankcase, with an external oil reservoir. The 996 GT3 has 360ย PS (265ย kW; 355ย hp), compared to the 300ย PS (221ย kW; 296ย hp) of the regularย Porsche 996. In GT3 configuration, this so-called “split”ย crankcase(meaning the parting line of crankcase is on the crankshaft centreline) uses, instead of a fan and finnedย cylinders, separate water jackets added onto each side of the crankcase to cool banks of three cylinders with water pumped through a radiator. Thus, the GT3 engine is very similar to the completely water-cooledย Porsche 962ย racing car’s engine, which is based on the same crankcase. The 962 differs, however, by using six individual cylinder heads while the GT1/GT3, like the air and water-cooledย Porsche 959, uses two cylinder heads, each covering a bank of three cylinders. The GT3 engine could thus also be thought of as similar to a 959 engine, but with water-cooled cylinders. Up to early model year 2004 996 GT3 production, the basic casting used for the crankcase of the GT3 was the same as the air-cooled engine. The “964” casting number was visible on the bottom of the crankcase, and on areas normally machined in air-cooled applications, but not in water-cooled ones. The crankcase casting was changed in mid-2004 to a “996” casting number crankcase to eliminate these external air-cooled remnants, but internally it was the same.

Because the 911 air-cooled crankcase uses the Porsche 356 engine to transmission mounting flange configuration, the 996 GT3 used aย manual gearboxย also of air-cooled 911 heritage. This gearbox has interchangeable gear ratios and is more durable making it more suitable for racing than the standard 911 type 996 gearbox.

To bring the vehicle’s track-prowess to the maximum level, Porsche endowed the GT3 with enlargedย brakes, a lowered, re-tuned suspension system, lighter-weight wheels and a new front bumper with matched rear spoiler to help increaseย downforce, thereby increasing grip.

Porsche offered a no-cost option for the GT3 called the ‘Clubsport’ package. This option replaced the standard electrically adjustableย leatherย front seats with manually adjustable racing buckets finished in fire-retardant fabric, single massย flywheel, bolt-in half-roll cage, 6-point drivers racing harness (also replacing the standard side airbags), fire extinguisher (mounted in the front passenger footwell) and preparation for a battery master switch. The Clubsport option was never offered to US customers, ostensibly due to the additional DOT crash testing that would have been required to allow US sales.

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