National Post

RUF’s Yellow Bird set to soar again

- Derek McNaughton Driving. ca

• Alois Ruf Jr. was 14 years old when a Porsche 901 prototype screamed past him on the road, the sound of the car echoing through his soul. It was 1964, the debut year for the Porsche 911. He can hear the sound of that flat-six engine still.

“I never forget that. And that gave me goosebumps that never left me alone,” says Ruf during a conversati­on about his all- new car, a 710- horsepower, 1,200- kilogram descendant of the vehicle that made him and his company, RUF Automobile, i nternation­ally famous.

That car, of which only 29 were built, went on to sell many more virtual copies through Sony’s PlayStatio­n. The popularity of the CTR “Yellow Bird” was due in part to the fact it was an ultracool version of the 964 model Porsche 911, but more so that it set the record in 1987 as the world’s fastest production car, hitting 340 km/ h and beating such iconic superstars of the day as the Ferrari F-40, Lamborghin­i Countach, and even the coveted Porsche 959. A legend had arrived. While Ruf rated the CTR and its 3.2-litre flat-six engine at 469 horsepower, many suspected he was being modest. In subsequent tests, the real number exceeded 500, an astonishin­g figure for such a small car. Then, in 1995, Ruf achieved 349 km/ h with his CTR2, making him father to the second fastest road-legal production car in the world, just behind the McLaren F1 that cost several times as much. No wonder Sony cut a licensing deal with Ruf, letting kids of all ages go feral with one of the wildest cars of our time that isn’t an outrageous supercar.

Not surprising­ly, many of those kids grew up to be successful. And which car do they want to buy and drive today?

“The kids that used to play that game, they are now our customers again. That’s a lovely feeling,” says Ruf, his eyes watering a little while chatting at the Geneva Motor Show, where his 2017 production CTR, at a cost of €750,000 ($1.07 million), sits on a rotating stand, resplenden­t in the same soaring yellow as his original CTR.

The new RUF is not, however, a Porsche replica or a modified 911 like Rob Dickinson’s Singer 911s. While a Singer car and an RUF car might command similarly crazy money, Singer adopts a different philosophy, Ruf says. Singer is reimaginin­g the 911, and “doing a very nice job,” whereas RUF is a car manufactur­er in its own right, building its own chassis, engines and other components. Each car gets its own RUF serial number, the company staying true to its roots as a builder of fast, competent sports cars that happen to look like one of the most beautiful automotive renderings of our ages — the Porsche 911 that continues to unfold with every new generation, each holding true to the car’s original design.

RUF’s new, rear- wheeldrive car has a skin and monocoque chassis made of carbon fibre. Crash structures are lightweigh­t steel, as is an integrated roll cage. The engine, a 3.6-L twin-turbo flat six, was built by RUF and puts down a walloping 649 lb- ft of torque. Zero to 100 km/ h takes 3.5 seconds, zero to 200 requires less than nine, and top speed is “in excess” of 360 km/h, Ruf says.

The interior is bathed in Alcantara with a dash reminiscen­t of the Porsche 993. The transmissi­on is a six- speed manual, the wheels 19- inch forged centre locks.

The idea was to follow the footsteps of the original CTR, Ruf says, a “new interpreta­tion” of his legendary car.

“It has the finest of chassis work, not too much electronic, so it’s still a very analogue car,” he says. At only 1,200 kilograms, “it’s so light, it’s part of your body. I claim the car doesn’t feel like a car; it feels like you’re wearing it.”

And that’s what young people want today, he says. In today’s increasing­ly digital and virtual world, they’re craving the kind of car their father, or uncle, used to drive, and are less interested in the latest gimmicks in electronic­s that can be had on just about any car. Many want a manual transmissi­on to make that connection. But no matter their age, all RUF customers still want to go fast, still want to feel raw horsepower, still want to feel truly alive.

“They still want that kick, that feeling of overwhelmi­ng power and lightness,” Ruf says, “because performanc­e is a feel between lightness and engine performanc­e. It’s a big mistake to believe you can make up extra weight with extra horsepower. That’s the wrong way to go. You have to keep the absolute weight as low as possible, then you don’t need to exaggerate with horsepower.”

Ruf ’s new car, only 30 of which will be built, is certainly built for speed. Ruf, now in his late sixties, says he would have no problem driving it at 360 km/ h on the Autobahn, that the brakes are more than up to the task, the suspension, cooling, downforce and aerodynami­cs all suited for such blistering missions.

The new CTR will not be his last, nor will Ruf’s popularity recede as a maker of expensive sports cars, even as older buyers with deep pockets diminish.

“The fact ( the cars) are all pretty much sold now, to the people who know us, and some newcomers are also there that haven’t had a RUF car before, it’s a great feeling,” he says. “It confirms us, makes us feel good. It’s a whole new generation.”

 ?? SUPPLIED / RUF ?? Alois Ruf and his RUF CRT at the 2017 Geneva Motor Show.
SUPPLIED / RUF Alois Ruf and his RUF CRT at the 2017 Geneva Motor Show.
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