


Magnesium wheels made by Campagnolo can be found on just about any Italian supercar from the era that the term was birthed in, as well as cars competing in Formula 1 and on the world stages of rallying; RAYS has been the go-to brand for nearly every Japanese manufacturer in motorsport at one point or another; Speedline and Ferrari have been paired on roads and race tracks for decades; but it's hard to think of any combination to rival the almost innate relationship between Porsche and Fuchs. Porsche pretty much brings the design out for special option packages nowadays, and they've probably mounted more BBSes to their cars than anything else since they raced on the first sets in the early 1970s, but if you ask anyone who knows enough to know what Fuchs and BBS are to tell you the wheels that go on a 911 it's likely going to be the former. But they don't just build 911s.







It makes sense that the two would leave a lasting impression; we can agree the 911 is a pretty "enduring" design, and so the wheels that appear on the definitive early models are too. The Fuchs wheels helped, in some way, to make those 901 and G-series 911s pop culture icons, and as such they've benefited by having the car's still-growing wave of popularity rub off on the design of the wheel too. A Fuchs on an RSR race car with a huge barrel as wide as your head is objectively pretty cool, but so is a center-lock mag with a composite turbofan covering the gold-painted magnesium underneath. There are a lot more wheels for a Porsche than Fuchs, and they extend beyond BBS too. Minilites, Torque Thrusts, Jongbloeds, OZs, Speedlines, Compomotives, the list is long, and though I'm sure some good ones were missed, I hope you enjoy this gallery of wheels from last weekend's Rennsport Reunion.






























