Faszination on the Nürburgring: Porsche
Even the title provides a frisson: we know the awesome challenges of the Nordschleife, either first-hand or courtesy ofTop Gear . But Ruf’s 20-minute movie, catchable on YouTube (and below), shows how it should be done. Not only does it consolidate the reputation of the legendary CTR Yellowbird, it makes a star of test driver Stefan Roser too.There’s a camera behind him on the cage so you see him working, endlessly jiggling the steering wheel and shifting from gear to gear; and there’s another on the passenger door catching the occasional shift and dancing on the pedals. But it’s the mesmerising, relentless pursuit of the sinuous blacktop receding into infinity that holds the viewer wrapt.
In a month that’s seen the , and Ruf models displayed throughout Monterey Car Week, sit back and enjoy the legend. The film begins innocuously enough: a glimpse of the cars in-build at Pfaffenhausen. And then it takes off: ‘Faszination on the Nürburgring , the world’s fastest car on the most challenging race circuit in the world,’ goes the voiceover.
Unencumbered by crash helmet, gloves or race suit, Stefan Roser flicks the Yellowbird this way and that, rushing contemptuously past slower cars and bikes, diving into dips, edging into turns, correcting, opposite locking, flipping through the gears, third, fourth, fifth, tyres squealing as he apexes, armfuls of lock as the car gets sideways, and then on his second lap it’s interspersed with trackside and aerial sequences of the car in action, smoke pouring off the tyres as Roser goes askew. The film went viral with the arrival of the internet, and it’s obvious why: it has to be the archetypal movie of driving a road car on track.
The Yellowbird CTR1: Porsche

Endowed with nearly twice as many horses as decreed by Zuffenhausen, and mustering 408lb/ft torque from its blown flat-six in the narrow-body, de-guttered shell, it was 13mph quicker in a straight line than the much-vaunted 959.

Now, during a session on the smooth blacktop that criss-crosses the Bavarian farmland around Ruf’s Pfaffenhausen HQ, we reacquaint ourselves with the Yellowbird CTR1 and one of its 2016 successors, the SCR 4.2. To place a little context on the designations, Ruf’s 911-based models are corralled in initialled groups – SCR, BTR, CR, BR, CTR, RCT, RTR and RGT, comprising two or three evolutions based on the contemporary ‘donor’ 911 model, beginning in 1983, and based on single- or twin-turbo fitment, or increased engine capacity.

The CTR1 – standing for ‘Group C Turbo Ruf’ - appeared in 1987. Its Motronic-managed powerplant is the KKK Type K26 twin-turbo 3.4-litre unit, developing 496bhp. Each air-charge intercooler is mounted ahead of the rear wheels. Though the rear wings are wider than standard by an inch either side (2.5cm), the shell is further streamlined by the removal of the roof-flanking rain gutters, which also cuts down wind noise, and wind-cheating plastic bumpers are fitted, prefiguring the 964, instead of the donor 3.2 Carrera’s rubber-gaitered impact bumpers.

An IMSA-style whaletail rear wing projects from the engine lid, and beneath the car, running from side to side midway within the wheelbase, there’s a little rubber aerodynamic strip that comes into play at high speeds. The suspension is 40mm lower than standard, using Bilstein gas dampers and running 2.5° negative camber. Braking is by 330mm discs sourced from the 962 Group C parts-bin. Minimalist rear number plate lights reference the 911R.

If ever a car fitted like a glove it’s the Ruf Yellowbird: the chairs in the CTR1 are figure-hugging Recaros clad with a spongy fabric centre section and leather sides and backs, with provision for a full harness. There’s an ignition cut-off on the dashboard just to the right of the Ruf monogrammed steering wheel, and it has a leather-lined roof and door panels, pre-dating the hallmark Ruf internal rollcage. There’s a boost gauge and a knob to turn up the turbo boost. The rear seats are absent, with rollcage and Simpson harness anchor points instead.

The front luggage compartment is equally uncluttered, manifesting a brake balance adjuster and custom-made strut-brace between the turrets. Yet for all its rawness, it is practical too: the Yellowbird Porsche provides race car performance that can be applied on the road.




