996 GT3R
The Porsche 996 GT3R features naturally-aspirated 3.6-liter flat-six Type M96/77 producing 360-370 horsepower at 7,200 rpm through six-speed sequential transmission and rear-wheel-drive at approximately 1,100kg competition weight. GT3R specification includes water-cooled engine architecture marking departure from air-cooled 993 generation, racing suspension with adjustable dampers and geometry, lightweight body panels reducing weight from road-going GT3, sequential gearbox with pneumatic actuation, racing ABS system, FIA-compliant roll cage, fire suppression system, and aerodynamic package with rear wing and front splitter meeting GT class homologation requirements.
996 GT3R represents first water-cooled Porsche customer racing platform introduced 1999 with approximately 65 units produced, establishing controversial transition from traditional air-cooled motorsport heritage toward modern liquid-cooling technology addressing thermal management and emissions compliance while maintaining GT3 model performance credibility. The dominance in 2000 FIA GT Championship N-GT class demonstrated competitive capability despite initial skepticism from Porsche purists, with successor 996 GT3 RSR evolution increasing output to 445 horsepower proving development potential in water-cooled architecture, creating foundation for contemporary GT3 customer racing program establishing Porsche motorsport dominance across global championships through subsequent 997, 991, and 992 generation evolution maintaining continuous development lineage from controversial 996 origins.