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.
During the gestation of the 992-generation GT3 RS, something clearly snapped at Porsche. Test mules wore wings so huge that many assumed they were assessing aero for the Le Mans-bound 911 RSR. When the car was eventually revealed, we discovered that it had sacrificed its frunk in favour of a colossal motorsport-style central radiator, and that even its wishbones were sculpted to generate downforce. It was mutated in a way that made us wonder if its creators had lost touch with reality, but this was only the mark of a job well done. Where could Manthey possibly now take the package? Preuninger's scorched-earth engineering policy had left no avenues.

Or so we naively thought. Before us in the pits at Silverstone, radiating menace, is Nürburgring-based Manthey's take on the 992-era GT3 RS. It is a 3RS, clearly, just not a normal one. The body is slammed to the deck and the wing wears endplates that could shutter the windows of a Georgian town house. It has roof vanes to direct messy hot air escaping the central front radiator sideways, lest it interfere with the DRS rear wing. The front splitter juts out so far that it requires supports. There are canards, aero discs for the rear wheels, plus a shark fin and the mother of all diffusers, all wrought in carbonfibre. The result is downforce increased from 860kg at 175mph in the regular 3RS to more than one metric tonne in the Manthey, with no additional penalty in drag.
And those are just the bits you can see. Underneath the skin, gone are the donor car's Bilstein dampers, replaced by KW units with custom springing and valving. Manthey cars historically used manually adjustable dampers but this time the hardware is plumbed into Porsche's finickety new PASM system for altering bump and rebound on each axle via the steering wheel. One suspects the tuning of this system has not been the work of a moment. There are also braided brake lines and sticky Michelin Pilot Cup 2 R tyres that can buy you 10 seconds at the 'Ring.






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