Try GOLD - Free
WHO DUNNIT?
BBC Top Gear UK
|April 2025
Who is responsible for inventing the hardcore special sports car? When did it catch on, and has the concept passed its peak?
-

Seems like the simplest idea for squeezing a dollop more cash out of a sports car, doesn’t it? The stripped, striped track bred runout special. You’d imagine it was a notion five minutes younger than the car itself. That Karl Benz clambered down off his Patent-Motorwagen and declared it was time to add an adjustable rear wing and suede upholstered tiller.
But nein. It’s tricky to definitively pin down who deserves the credit for kickstarting the gold rush, but like a fair few motoring brainwaves, it’s probably German. More than likely had the engine in the back. You know where this is going, don’t you? Enter the 1973 Porsche 911 2.7 RS. All the elements are there – a (cute by modern standards) aero package climaxing in the first appearance of the ducktail spoiler. Stiffer Bilstein suspension, wider tyres, pumped out bodywork fashioned from thinner sheet metal. Soundproofing in the skip, more horses under the kicked up bootlid. Just like today’s GT3, buyers could choose between a more dailyable Touring (1,075kg) or a more extreme 960kg Sport.
Porsche expected to sell 500 – enough to tick the racecar homologation box and satisfy the FIA its new racing 911 is still road related. But the RS catches the company off guard: demand tripled the original allocation.
So you’d presume the flood gates would open... but no. The rest of the 1970s and entire 1980s are a barren zone for the track refugee.
‘RS’ doesn’t appear on a 911 again until 1992, on the 964 gen car. With no aircon, no power steering, a roll cage, road skimming ride height and even the cabin courtesy light binned, it shed 120kg and gained a handful of horsepower. But the ‘pay more, get less’ equation and sheer harshness of the RS didn’t add up. Reviews were vicious and sales stuttered. Naturally, a 964 RS is now a £250k unicorn – about half as much as you’ll pay for the 2.7 grandaddy.
This story is from the April 2025 edition of BBC Top Gear UK.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM BBC Top Gear UK

BBC Top Gear UK
CLEAN SLATE
Minimalism is back... and so is a proper sports car in Audi's line up. Meet the Concept C, yours in two years' time
5 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
AMG ONE VS THE REAL WORLD
Yep, we drove the AMG on the road too... and lived to tell the tale
8 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
THE ART OF ILLUSION
Fancy an iconic classic but short a few million? There's a garage in Japan that could well be the answer to your dreams
4 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
SHOW BIZ
The motor show is dead, apparently... nobody told Munich. But what's a day pounding the carpets really like in 2025? We dispatched Sam to soak it all in
8 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
HYBRID CROSSOVERS
The Qashqai was the original crossover... these days it's been leapfrogged in the pecking order. Can a Dacia beat the OG?
5 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
DACIA BIGSTER
£24,995 OTR/£26,700 as tested/£114 pcm WHY IT'S HERE: Value motoring for a decently sized SUV. But is the Bigster bigster value or just cheap?
1 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
FURY ROAD
Meet the Hennessey Venom F5 Revolution Evo... the world's most powerful internal combustion road car.
9 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
let's freaking go!
Never has being physically assaulted from multiple angles felt like such fun.
5 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
IN THE SHADOW OF GIANTS
The S1 LM is a tribute to arguably the world's greatest racing car, based on the world's best supercar. Here's how it happened, from the man who dreamed it up...
8 mins
November 2025

BBC Top Gear UK
Shape shifters
More and more companies are embracing the idea that a watch can be whatever shape it wants
2 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size