Ruf Automobile
Ruf Automobile GmbH is a German car manufacturer that manufactures and engineers original vehicles using unmarked Porsche chassis, specifically known as bodies in white. The cars are built from the ground up as completely new cars, using these bare chassis, and assembled using Ruf-made parts and materials, instead of badge engineering or disassembly of existing cars. This means the company is officially recognized as a manufacturer by the German government. As such, all Ruf models have certified Ruf VIN and serial numbers, and are recognized as production models, rather than modified Porsches. Ruf is historically known for its record breaking 211 mph CTR, and is the largest, most renowned company to make Porsche performance enhancements. Though primarily a manufacturer, Ruf has also made a name for itself operating as a car tuner, a specialist in customer-requested Porsche-to-Ruf conversions, and a restorer of classic Porsche and Ruf models. Ruf carries out service and crash repair, as well.
VIN
Ruf Automobile GmbH operated as a car manufacturer and a car tuner at the same time for some model. For example the famous CTR was manufactured only 29 times from bodies in white, at the same time about 20-30 cars were built from customers' cars. To distinguish between manufactured cars and tuned cars is possible to look at the VIN. RUF VIN starts with "W09", Porsche VIN starts with "WP".History
The company was founded in 1939 in Pfaffenhausen, Germany as "Auto Ruf" by Alois Ruf Sr. as a service garage and was eventually expanded to include a full-service gas station in 1949. Ruf began experimenting with vehicle designs of his own in the late 1940s, and in 1955 designed and built a tour bus, which he marketed around Germany. The positive response it received led to Ruf expanding his business again by starting his own separately owned bus company.Alois Sr.'s involvement in the car industry had a distinct effect on his son, Alois Ruf Jr., who became a sports car enthusiast. In 1960, Alois Jr. began servicing and restoring Porsche automobiles out of his father's garage. Following Alois Sr's. death in 1974, 24-year-old Alois Jr. took control of the business and focused on his passion: Porsche vehicles, and especially the 911. A year later in 1975, the first Ruf-enhanced Porsche came to life.
Ruf debuted their first complete model in 1977, a tuned version of Porsche's 930 with a stroked 3.3 litre motor. This was followed in 1978 by Ruf's first complete non-turbo Porsche, the 911 SCR. It was a naturally aspirated 911 with a stroked 3.2 litre motor producing 217 horsepower. Numerous customer orders were placed for this vehicle.
In the years since, the company has made a major mark on the automotive world by producing exceptionally powerful and exclusive Porsche-based production models. The 1987 Ruf CTR achieved a top speed of in April 1987 and set the record as the world's fastest production car for its time; in 1988 it even reached. Its successor, the 1995 Ruf CTR2, had clocked a top speed of, making it for a brief moment the fastest road-legal production car in the world in the mid '90s, until the McLaren F1 broke the record in 1998 at 241 mph, thus making the CTR2 as the 2nd fastest production car of the decade. However, the CTR2 cost only a fraction of the price of the F1.
In April 2007, Ruf released the new CTR3 to celebrate the company's new plant in Bahrain, and as a 20th anniversary celebration of the original CTR and successor to the CTR2. At the 2010 Geneva Motor Show, Ruf also showcased the RGT-8, the first production V8-powered 911 in history.
Ruf models
Current models
Past models
Please be aware that this table is still incomplete.Model | Duration of production | Based on | Engine | Top speed | Image |
Turbo 3.3 | 1975-? | Porsche 930 | 3.3L turbocharged flat-6 | ||
SCR | 1978-1981 | Porsche 911SC | 3.2L naturally aspirated flat-6 | ||
BTR | 1983–1989 | Porsche 930 | 3.4L turbocharged flat-6 | ||
CTR "Yellowbird" | 1987–1996 | Porsche 911 Carrera 3.2 | 3.4L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | ||
BTR III | 1988–1989 | Porsche 964 | 3.4L turbocharged flat-6 | ||
BR2 | 1991-1992 | Porsche 964 Carrera | 3.3L turbocharged flat-6 | ||
CR2 | 1991 | Porsche 964 Carrera 2 | 3.6L turbocharged flat-6 | - | |
CR4 | 1991 | Porsche 964 Carrera 4 | 3.6L turbocharged flat-6 | - | |
RCT | 1993 | Porsche 964 | 3.6L turbocharged flat-6 | ||
BTR2 | 1993-1998 | Porsche 993 | 3.6L turbocharged flat-6 | ||
CTR2 | 1996-1997 | Porsche 993 | 3.6L twin-turbocharged flat-6 "entry-level": SPORT: | ||
3400S | 1999-2002 | Porsche 986 | 3.4L naturally aspirated flat-6 | ||
RGT | 2000–2004 | Porsche 996 | 3.6L naturally aspirated flat-6 "entry-level": RS: | ||
RTurbo | 2001-? | Porsche 996 | 3.6L twin-turbocharged flat-6 variant 1: variant 2: | ||
3600S | 2002-? | Porsche 986 | 3.6L naturally aspirated flat-6 | ||
Rt 12 | 2004-? | Porsche 997 | 3.6L twin-turbocharged flat-6 variant 1: variant 2: 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 variant 1: variant 2: | over | |
RGT | 2005–2011 | Porsche 997 | 3.8L naturally aspirated flat-6 | - | |
RK Spyder | 2005-? | Porsche 987 | 3.8L supercharged flat-6 | over | |
RK Coupé | 2006-? | Porsche 987c | 3.8L supercharged flat-6 | over | |
R Kompressor | 2006-? | Porsche 997 | 3.6L supercharged flat-6 3.8L supercharged flat-6 | - | |
CTR3 | 2007–2012 | Ruf-designed body | 3.7L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | ||
3400 K | 2007-? | Porsche 987c | 3.4L supercharged flat-6 | - | |
Rt 12S | 2009-? | Porsche 997 | 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 cheerful approximation from 3746 cm3 | - | |
Dakara | 2009-? | Porsche 955 | 4.5L twin-turbocharged V8 | - | |
RGT-8 | 2010–? | Porsche 997 | 4.5L naturally aspirated V8 | ||
Rt 12R | 2011-? | Porsche 997 | 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | - | |
RGT-8 | 2012–? | Porsche 991 | 4.5L naturally aspirated V8 | ||
Rt 35 | 2012-? | Porsche 991 | 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | - | |
Rt 35 S | 2013-? | Porsche 991 | 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | - | |
Rt 35 Roadster | 2013-? | Porsche 991 | 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | - | |
3800S | 2013-? | Porsche 981 | 3.8L naturally aspirated flat-6 | ||
RGT 4.2 | 2015-? | Porsche 997 GT3 RS 4.0 | 4.2L naturally aspirated flat-6 | ||
RtR | 2015-? | Porsche 991 | 3.8L twin-turbocharged flat-6 variant 1: variant 2: | ||
TurboR Limited | 2016-? | Porsche 993 | 3.6L twin-turbocharged flat-6 | ||
SCR | 2016-? | Porsche 993 | 4.2L naturally aspirated flat-6 | ||
Ultimate | 2016-? | Ruf-designed body | 3.6L twin-turbocharged flat-6 |
Prototype models
- RXL
- eRuf Model A
- CTR
- RGT8
eRuf electric vehicles