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Porsche’s new 911 GT3 RS eclipsed the time of its predecessor by six seconds – and the standard, current-generation GT3 by 10 seconds – setting a new Nürburgring record for naturally-aspirated production cars in the process.


The 2023 Porsche 911 GT3 RS has lapped Germany’s world-famous Nürburgring race track in less than seven minutes – taking six minutes and 49.328 seconds to get around the 20.832km layout of the circuit.

Revealed in August, Porsche’s 992-generation 911 GT3 RS was able to shave 10.6 seconds off the ‘standard’ 992-series 911 GT3’s time around the Nürburgring Nordschleife – and beating the 991.2-generation GT3 RS by more than six seconds in the process.

In a media announcement, Porsche said the 911 GT3 RS completed a lap of the Nürburgring’s shorter 20.6km layout in six minutes and 44.848 seconds – becoming the fastest naturally-aspirated production car to do so.



The previous naturally-aspirated record holder is the Lamborghini Aventador SVJ, which posted a six-minute 44.97-second lap around the 20.6km layout in 2018 – about a tenth of a second slower than the GT3 RS.

Despite the blistering time, Porsche test driver Jörg Bergmeister believes the motorsport-derived supercar could have completed the lap quicker.



“We lost a little downforce due to the strong, sometimes gusting wind, but I’m still very happy with the lap,” Mr Bergmeister said in a media statement.

According to Porsche, the 911 GT3 RS was equipped with its track-focused Weissach package – fitting stickier but road-legal Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 R tyres to the rear-engined coupe, and cutting out weight.



Porsche claims the 992-generation 911 GT3 RS produces more than three times the downforce of the current 992 GT3 and twice as much downforce as its 991.2-generation GT3 RS predecessor.

The Porsche 911 GT3 RS is powered by a 386kW 4.0-litre naturally-aspirated flat six-cylinder engine – producing 11kW more than the 911 GT3 and a 3kW increase compared to the previous-generation GT3 RS.



In 2021, a 991.2-generation Porsche 911 GT2 RS – equipped with a factory-backed Manthey Performance Kit from German racing tuner Manthey Racing – set a new record of six minutes and 43.30 seconds around the 20.832km circuit.

The 911 GT2 RS’s time was assisted by its 515kW twin-turbo 3.8-litre six-cylinder petrol engine – 129kW more than the current 911 GT3 RS.

In 2018, Porsche endurance driver Timo Bernhard set the outright lap record at the Nürburgring, posting a time of five minutes and 19.55 seconds in the unregulated 919 Hybrid Evo.



Bernhard’s time eclipsed Stefan Bellof’s previous 1983 record – set in a Porsche 956 C race car – by more than 50 seconds.

Jordan Mulach

Jordan Mulach is Canberra/Ngunnawal born, currently residing in Brisbane/Turrbal. Joining the Drive team in 2022, Jordan has previously worked for Auto Action, MotorsportM8, The Supercars Collective and TouringCarTimes, WhichCar, Wheels, Motor and Street Machine. Jordan is a self-described iRacing addict and can be found on weekends either behind the wheel of his Octavia RS or swearing at his ZH Fairlane.

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