When the current 911 GT3 RS landed, it appeared Porsche - Zuffenhausen, the mothership - had finally pinned motorsport satellite Manthey into a development dead end.
This mattered because tiny Manthey's ability to turn a showroom-spec GT-division 911 into something even more special had always quietly frustrated Porsche, and especially division leader Andy Preuninger. Manthey would apply racing tricks that the factory, snared by endless homologation red tape, couldn't. Mightier wings, more aggressive geometries, belly-scraping ride heights: Porsche's RS people had the desire and the know-how but only Manthey, with its cottage status, could actually sell you anything. And boy did it reap the reputational rewards.
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