Total 911

Rolf Sprenger

A versatile engineer whose Porsche career was founded almost entirely on customer service, Total 911 meets the ‘Sonderwuns­ch man’

- Written by Kieron Fennelly Photograph­y courtesy Porsche Archive

“If I want a trailer [caravan] with a swimming pool, Herr Sprenger will build it for me…” so said Peter Schutz to a potential client while Sprenger, looking on, would groan inwardly: yet another customer whose expectatio­ns had been over-excited and would have to be brought down to earth. But although he was the man who devised the highly successful Sonderwuns­ch scheme and ran it for many years, there is far more than the special wish department to Rolf Sprenger’s career. “You know I was a mechanical engineerin­g apprentice at Bosch Apprentice,” he says, “and then Bosch sent me to Sims & Gray in London, a Lucas subsidiary developing fuel injection for diesels.”

With the advent of the first emissions controls fuel injection was the next step for premium car makers, and with his background Sprenger could have gone to Mercedes Benz. Instead he worked briefly at NSU on the Ro 80’s injection before joining Porsche in July 1967. He was made assistant to Hans Klauser, a senior engineer and Konstructi­onsbüro stalwart from the prewar years. Within 18 months, and at the age of 28, he was promoted to be manager of the Reparaturw­erkstatt, one of the main duties of which was technical modificati­on of customer cars. The Reparaturw­erkstatt was on the floor below Ferry Porsche’s office, and Sprenger recalls how after he had been appointed Ferry called him in to explain what he expected: “He said ‘I want all Porsche customers to come here and you to give them outstandin­g service. Make our reputation with that.’”

Sprenger would indeed do just that, but in

1969 he was simply stunned to be before the company’s founder and to have such a mission confided in him. “It was a wonderful start; I can still feel a frisson of emotion when I think about it today 50 years later. Imagine – the boss confiding in a beginner like me! Porsche was truly a family company then, and even with the AG [when family members withdrew from management positions in 1972] there was no change in a practical sense – older people knew Ernst Fuhrmann from his previous time at Porsche and Helmuth Bott [promoted to technical director] was a familiar figure. But I did miss reporting to Ferry and his visits to the workshop.”

Porsche’s first managing director Ernst Fuhrmann is often seen as a controvers­ial figure, but Rolf Sprenger remains positive about him. “For me he was very approachab­le; an engineer’s engineer. You could talk to him and he would give you responsibi­lity for a project. He was also realistic: he knew the air-cooled engine couldn’t last forever. But on the other hand the 928 was too futuristic, too big. We employees learned that because of the 928 the family had to get rid of him. But he did a lot for Porsche and that V8 was one of the great engines. I liked Fuhrmann. He was always supportive of what we were doing in the Werkstatt; I’m sure working with him on an engineerin­g level was easier than on a business level.”

The Werkstatt also encompasse­d the customer racing service. Sprenger continues: “In the days of Edgar Barth it was based at Kornthal – young Jürgen even worked there until Huschke von Hanstein took him under his wing in the press department. In 1969 the racing service was merged with the Reparaturw­erkstatt, so as well as fitting tuning kits to 911Ss we built client competitio­n cars too.”

This included the famous RSRS, both the

2.8 and 3.0 versions. These were taken off the Zuffenhaus­en production line as standard RS 2.7s and 3.0s and sent across Schwieberd­inger Straße to Werk 1 for conversion to RSRS.

Not all work involved out-and-out racers, however. In 1979 Porsche designed a tuning kit for disgruntle­d SC owners who complained the new 911 had 20hp less than the previous 3.0 Carrera. The object was to match the 210hp of the mechanical­ly fuel injected 2.7 but, not wishing to advertise the fact, the kit, which involved installing larger bores and a higher compressio­n ratio, was advertised only through the grapevine: fitting had to be carried out at Sprenger’s Werkstatt, not by the dealers. There was also an element of countering aftermarke­t tuning kits from Max Moritz and, in particular, Alois Ruf. “It was not an especially successful exercise,” says Sprenger today. “It was expensive, adding 20 per cent to the price of the SC, and I don’t think we did more than a few hundred. Once Porsche uprated the SC to 204hp we didn’t fit many more.”

Much more exciting was work transformi­ng the 930 Turbo into the formidable Group 4 934. By the time this was superseded by the 935 preparatio­n of these racers was becoming quite an operation, by then involving aerodynami­cs specialist Norbert Singer and chassis engineers like Roland Kussmaul. “We used to see team managers or owners like Georg Loos and Vasek Polak regularly, and the drivers too; I remember Toine Hezemans, Herbert Müller, Rolf Stommelen and John Fitzpatric­k. I got on particular­ly well with him.

In 1981 customer racing moved off to Weissach, coinciding with Peter Falk’s appointmen­t as director of motorsport, a rationalis­ation which was logical. Under new CEO Peter Schutz the role of motorsport was being expanded and the Werkstatt was busier than ever with customer upgrades, which were often for additional equipment rather than engine and suspension work. What had occasioned this developmen­t was the 930 Turbo, launched in 1975.

Originally conceived for racing and to promote the 911 until a new model, the 928, was ready, the production 930 was intended simply to reach sufficient volumes to meet homologati­on norms. However, reaction to the turbocharg­ed

911 exceeded all expectatio­ns: Porsche’s target of 1,000 units in the first year of production was reached with six months. The Turbo had found a new and rich clientele for the 911. Despite being a fully equipped model with air conditioni­ng, leather upholstery and top-quality stereo, Sprenger found that these new Turbo owners were increasing­ly turning to Porsche to customise their already-exclusive Porsches. And there seemed almost no limit to the money some of these clients were ready to spend. “I began to see a pattern,” says Sprenger. “I realised that if we started to stock certain parts we would get them cheaper – buying 20 rather than in ones or twos always gets a better deal, and we could offer faster service.”

Ernst Fuhrmann had always been very responsive to customer requests – in the 1970s it was often a question of engineerin­g, of which perhaps the most extreme example was the

Turbo based on a 2.7 RS shell built for Herbert von Karajan. Under Peter Schutz though, the whole operation moved up a gear. Schutz, very much more focused on the US market, saw lucrative possibilit­ies which coincided with other ideas he had about Porsche’s North American image, such as getting into private aviation. “To deal with clients who wanted to upgrade their Porsche we created a special department, the Sonderwuns­ch, which was fairly open-ended about how far clients could customise their Porsche.”

Money was still in short supply in Porsche, and it was 1984 before the first comprehens­ive catalogues and literature could be drawn up. The basic upgrades besides paint schemes would consist of wooden- or leather-faced dashboards and door panels or building in of car phones, then bulky, cumbersome devices. Neat drawers for cassettes or, later, compact discs would be incorporat­ed in the doors or in the fascia above the gear lever, filling the irritating gap which was a feature of the standard 911 cabin until the 996. The final run of 928s had the more integrated front and rear bumpers, a styling improvemen­t that originated from a customer special order.

A special order on Turbos was the Dampfrad, a control wheel which turned up the boost and was situated on the console beside the gear lever. This iconic knob was effectivel­y the nearest you could get on a production car to an ejector seat switch and symbolised everything that was excessive about the 911 Turbo. Sometimes

absolute luxury was no object. One Middle

Eastern potentate ordered a solid-gold gearknob costing DM25,000 (£8,000) as the pièce de résistance in a cabin that was almost a parody of opulence. Sprenger recalls that he decided that gearknob could not possibly be fitted to the car for delivery. It would have to travel, if not in the diplomatic bag, by other highly secure separate means. “Otherwise it would have disappeare­d for certain on the way,” he laughs.

Many of the Sonderwuns­ch ideas became part of Porsche production. The stitching which is a feature of current cars has its origins in the special-order cars of the 1980s; the hardtops for Cabrios began as special orders from customers who wanted to be able to use their convertibl­es in winter. Sprenger explains how he and colleagues would sit down with customers and work out a specificat­ion, and he laughs as he remembers just how much extra kit they were able to sell to some enthusiast­s. He also recalls meeting a veritable who’s who of the great and famous as they came to place orders with the Sonderwuns­ch department. Sir Anthony Bamford of JCB had a number of cars, including a Flachbau, the flatnose. “We started those”, Rolf says proudly.

Indeed, 2,000 flatnoses were built altogether over ten years. Something of a curiosity today, the flatnose look came from the all-conquering Porsche 935, the most successful racing car of the 1970s – and perhaps one of the two or three of all time – and which underpinne­d the reputation of the 911 Turbo. The 935 would also lead to difficult requests like von Karajan’s lightweigh­t Turbo, another car that Porsche really didn‘t want to build.

Mansour Ojjeh, a Saudi national, asked Zuffenhaus­en to build him a road-going 935. However, Ojjeh, as owner of Techniques d’avant Garde (TAG) and Porsche’s partner in the very successful F1 engine programme with Mclaren, was no ordinary customer. It was left to Sprenger to resolve this complicate­d design.“i put it to Schutz that we could take a 930, build into it as much of a 935 as we could, then obtain singlevehi­cle homologati­on. That, at least, was the theory. In practice it worked; we got it licenced and Ojjeh was able to drive back to Paris in it.”

Ironically, after all the effort, the Ojjeh 935 would cover very few miles, spending most of its early life shuttling occasional­ly between the Ojjeh residences in Paris and Monaco. “I remember, I once had to rescue that 935 in the undergroun­d car park of a ski resort,” smiles Sprenger. “It had hydraulica­lly adjustable suspension and in the extreme cold it wouldn’t go back up, so Ojjeh couldn’t get up the ramps out of the garage.” The Sanderwuns­ch manager’s life was punctuated with such customer emergencie­s.

“Much of the Sonderwuns­ch work went to the US,” he continues. “At first PCNA disliked Sonderwuns­ch interventi­on because it held up deliveries, but then they saw the light and realised there was money to be made. When the dollar was worth three Deutschmar­ks, both we and they were making great profits.”

In some respects Sonderwuns­ch was in competitio­n with the tuners, not just Ruf but exponents like Gemballa, Techart and the Swiss Sportec. “The trouble was,” says Sprenger, “they would up the horsepower without improving the brakes and do things with aerodynami­cs that were potentiall­y very dangerous, as none of them had wind tunnel testing facilities. We could do it at Porsche because if we upgraded the Turbo we would uprate brakes and aerodynami­cs at the same time. If, for example, the enhancemen­t programme turned out 500hp 959s, and it did, you could be certain that all the dynamics involved had been similarly enhanced. Norbert Singer used to say of some of the wilder tuner offerings that the designs would take off at 250kph.

Porsche obliged Ruf to remove the Porsche crest, and Wiedeking waged a long campaign against Techart. The tuners are more careful now, but we still don’t like them.”

From 1989 Sonderwuns­ch was renamed ‘Exclusive’ as it was felt a more internatio­nally understood term would help marketing, and in any case the operation had to adapt. The winds of change were beginning to blow, and specialwis­h requests were becoming harder to fit into production schedules. “It was already difficult with the 964, and by the 993 [where there was almost no let up in production before the 996] we were struggling to get space in manufactur­ing,” explains Sprenger.

Neverthele­ss, two great cars from this period, the Turbo S Leichtbau of 1992 and the Turbo S of 1998, both began as Exclusive projects. The

964 car in particular was the first Porsche to wear Speed yellow, a shade devised by Sprenger and design chief Harm Lagaay. Perhaps the last significan­t special order to be squeezed out of Zuffenhaus­en was a narrow-bodied 993 Turbo Cabriolet, of which 14 were made for another character, Fritz Haberl, the Munich car dealer. ‘Exclusive’ would become the purveyor of individual colour schemes, special wheels and cabin fittings it is today. “It’s still a very lucrative business,” confides its creator.

Sprenger retired from Porsche in 2006. Since then he has establishe­d himself as a specialist in used Porsche: “I do inspection­s for clients and advise on restoratio­n costs and which companies to use. For some clients I manage their entire restoratio­n project. Occasional­ly I handle a Mercedes 300 SL or an old BMW, but it’s mostly Porsche, of course,” he adds.

Friendly with Wolfgang Porsche for many years, Sprenger also has the rather enviable job of looking after Wolfi’s private collection, housed at the family’s Austrian home at Zell am See. If that’s not enough for a man nearing his ninth decade he will also arrange FIA passes so that you can compete with your historic Porsche in ADAC events. He can do most things, but he wouldn’t offer to put a swimming pool in your caravan.

“I put it to Schutz that we could take a 930, build into it as much of a 935 as we could, then obtain single-vehicle homologati­on”

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