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The best RUF cars of all time

06th January 2025
Russell Campbell

Founded in 1939 by Alois Ruf Sr., Ruf started life as a service garage before entering the world of bus building, after building a company bus to promote its work. When Alois Ruf Jr. came along, the company grew its ties to Porsche as Ruf Jr. began servicing 911s in his father's garage.

Following his father's death in 1974, Ruf Jr. decided to focus on his passion for Porsche, building his first Ruf-enhanced Porsche in 1975 before the company's first complete model, a tuned version of the Turbo, came along in 1977. By 1987, the Ruf CTR – or Yellowbird – established the firm as a supercar baiter, and it hasn't looked back since. These are the ten best Rufs ever.  

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Ruf Turbo 3.3

The Turbo 3.3 was the first car Ruf ever made and saw it recognised as a manufacturer in its own right – setting out its stall as an extraordinary company that could improve Porsche's everyday 911 supercar in almost every way possible. Ruf didn't take the easy route by simply turning up the boost on the 930 Turbo. Instead, the car's cylinders were bored, bringing the 3.0-litre engine up to 3.3 litres and adding a dual exit exhaust for better gas flow. The result? Power increased from 260PS (191kW) to 303PS (223kW) and torque from 343Nm (253lb ft) to 411Nm (303lb ft).

From there, Ruf replaced the 930's four-speed box with a low-ratio five-speed bolted to a limited-slip differential. Separate oil coolers served the engine and gearbox, and the rectangular air intake housing them was the biggest clue that your Turbo wasn't a standard Porsche fare. Removing the air-conditioning, fancy stereo, and the standard bumpers (swapped for RS-style fibreglass alternatives) shaved 95kg from the standard car's 1,195kg.

Porsche's car did 0-62mph in 5.7 seconds and was out of puff at 156mph; Ruf's machine did the same in five seconds dead and, if you could resist the optional wide body (hard), went onto a top speed of 174mph. No wonder customers happily paid a 50 per cent premium over a standard 930. 

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Ruf BTR

The BTR holds a special place in Ruf's heart as the first of the company's models to get its own VIN plate, with a bare chassis delivered directly from Porsche. It was also the first model to deliver the ludicrous performance the brand was famous for, with some versions of the BRT capable of 190mph back in the 1980s when your mum and dad's Golf barely meandered to 100. 

Production of the BTR (standing for Group B Turbo Ruf) began in 1983 with the car getting a 3.4-litre flat-six with a modified turbo producing 374PS (275kW) and 480Nm (354lb ft) of torque through either a five or laterally six-speed gearbox. Stiffer suspension, bigger brakes and a more luxurious interior completed the overhaul, and customers could choose either narrow or wide body configurations. A BTR competed in Road & Track's World's Fastest Car contest in 1984, hitting a top speed of 186.2mph.

Three years later, the same car, with an odometer showing more than 200,000 miles, hit 187mph, showing that a pilgrimage to Ruf hadn't harmed the 911's unique combination of performance and durability. Just 20-30 BTRs were built at the Ruf factory, with many more customers Turbos built to spec. You can spot them by their revised front air dam, optional 935 ear-style wing mirrors and 17-inch, five-spoke Ruf wheels. 

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Ruf CTR Yellowbird

If the Turbo 3.3 and BTR established Ruf as a carmaker, the 1987 CTR Yellowbird was the car that put it on the map, bringing with it unheard-of performance for a 1980s road car. The Ruf posted an official top speed of 213mph at the Nardò Ring in 1988, where a red-faced Ferrari F40, Enzo's seminal supercar, could manage just 199mph. It was all the more impressive because the narrow-bodied Porsche looked so unassuming parked next to Maranello's blood-red Italian stallion. Or at least, it would have looked unassuming had it not been finished in Ruf's Blossom Yellow paint.

Contrary to expectations, the Yellowbird was based not on a Turbo but on a basic Carrera 3.2 shell, favoured for its lighter weight and lower drag coefficient. From there, Ruf built the ultimate 911 with characteristic gusto, using lightweight aluminium for the doors, bonnet and engine cover and replacing the bumpers with fibreglass items. Meanwhile, air ducts on the stretched rear wheel arches fed the car's massive intercoolers.

And that cooling was very much needed to chill the air going to the huge twin turbos that fed the Yellowbird's 3.4-litre flat-six to produce 469PS (345kW) officially, although the reality is thought to be far more, and 553Nm (498lb ft) of torque. The result was a 1,150kg missile that could accelerate from 0-150mph in under 15 seconds. 

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Ruf CTR2 

The performance of the original Yellowbird was so phenomenal that Ruf took more than ten years to build a car that could better its straight-line performance – the 220mph CTR2 launched in 1995.

Based on the 993 Turbo with a lightweight Kevlar body and the option of four-wheel drive, only the McLaren F1 and Nissan's R390 GT1 road car could better the CTR 2's 217mph top speed. Standing for Group C, Turbo Ruf, 2nd generation, the CTR 2's engine was derived from Porsche’s 962 Le Mans racer's twin-turbocharged 3.6-litre tuned to produce 580PS (433kW) and 686Nm (505lb ft), covering the standard quarter mile in 11.4 seconds at almost 124mph.

Alois Ruf was so keen to prove the CTR 2's credentials he entered two modified examples into 1997's Pikes Peak rally, and his drivers – brothers Steve and David Bedder – drove the cars to the event to demonstrate their mixture of on-road usability and stunning track performance, something they did astonishingly well by finishing second and fourth overall at the event. Christened the CTR 2 Sport, the Pikes Peaks cars had 702PS (523kW), accounting for 12 of the 28 CTR2s built. 

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Ruf 3400K

Only relatively recently has Porsche kitted out its Boxster and Cayman models with the power they crave. Still, Ruf has been doing it since the original Boxster launched in 1996, starting with the 3400S, a 986 Boxster with a 310PS (228kW) 3.4-litre motor from the 911, soon followed by the 340PS (254kW) 3600S.

But the Cayman-based 3400K is even more interesting because it had something no Porsche-supplied ever Cayman had – a supercharger. Based on the 987 Cayman S, forced induction gave the 3400K 400PS (294kW) and with it, the performance to take on its bigger brother, the 911, getting it from 0-62mph in 4.4 seconds and onto a top speed of 180mph.

Six-pot front callipers made sure the Cayman had braking to match its newfound performance, but Ruf wasn't content with simply upping the power; the company also sorted out the looks of the relatively limp 987 Cayman. The addition of a reworked front bumper with a deep air dam made the coupé look like a junior supercar and a set of Ruf's trademark flat-faced five-spoke alloys completed the job. 

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Ruf CTR3

If the 3400K was a Porsche Cayman on caffeine, then the CTR3 was a Cayman on something much stronger. You'd have to search hard to find anything remotely 'Cayman' about the CT3, which is almost wholly rebuilt next to Porsche's entry-level sports car. Large swathes of the CTR 3 are built from aluminium, while a lightweight Kevlar-carbon composite body was draped over the Multimatic-built structure. 

The powertrain was just as unique as the chassis. Lurking under the engine cover, you'll find a mid-mounted 3.7-litre flat-six hooked up to a pair of intercooled KKK K24 turbos for 701PS (515kW) and 656lb ft (889Nm) of torque, a 'sizable' boost over the 320PS (325kW) or thereabouts you got from a standard Cayman.

That was enough to catapult the CTR 3 into the performance big league with 0-62mph taking 3.2 seconds and 0-124mph coming up in 9.6 seconds as it headed on its merry way to a phenomenal 233mph top speed. 

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RUF Tribute 

The motoring landscape has changed significantly since Ruf built its first car in the 1970s, and now you can choose from a host of companies that will, at great expense, restomod your 911. The Ruf Tribute is the answer to those cars, giving you an idea of how far a restomod can go. While it looks like a 964, the Tribute sits on a bespoke carbon fibre chassis that is as light as it is strong and a perfect structure to hang the car's carbon fibre bodywork. 

The engine takes the same highly modern approach to an old-school design, with an air-cooled, 3.6-litre flat-six motor benefiting from variable valve timing and lift, a fly-by-wire throttle and Bosch engine management. Add a pair of chubby intercooled turbos into the mix, and the result is 558PS (410kW) at 6,750rpm and a 750Nm (553 lb ft) dollop of torque at 4,500rpm. 

RUF hasn't given performance figures but expects 0-62mph in around 3.4 seconds, and 0-124mph in less than 12 with a plus-200mph top speed. With a weight of less than 1,300kg, double-wishbone suspension and horizontally mounted dampers, you can expect the Tribute to be as adept in corners as it is on the straights. 

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Ruf CTR3 Evo

The Ruf CTR3 Evo is the most powerful car Ruf has ever built and a fine example of why you should buy your Cayman from Ruf, not Porsche – turning Stuttgart's entry-level sports car into a machine that can embarrass supercar royalty. 

The CTR3 Evo's RUF-fettled motor pumps out an easy 800PS (500kW) at 7,100rpm and a commanding 900Nm (730lb ft) of torque to the rear wheels at a useful 4,000rpm. Figures that better the standard CT3 Clubsport capable of 0-62mph in 3.2 seconds on its way to a 236mph top speed.

Tipping the scales at under 1,400kg, the Evo’s wide body, front splitter, rear diffuser, canards and picnic-ready rear spoiler should keep you welded to the road like a limpet. Plus, you get an uprated suspension, dry-sump lubrication, and carbon-ceramic disc brakes that are the size of dustbin lids. At around £570,000 the RUF is not cheap, double the price of a Porsche 911 S/T, but few will argue, given the performance differential between the two. 

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Ruf SCR 2018

The Ruf SCR is the Porsche-tuning wizard's answer to the steady influx of restomod Porsches, but it goes further than any of them. Styled to look like a 964 – one of the esteemed model codes for Porsche aficionados – the SCR is entirely bespoke with a carbon fibre chassis and body built in-house at Ruf, meaning it tips the scales at a featherweight 1,250kg.

Outside, you get Ruf centre-lock wheels; inside, you'll find gorgeous hounds-tooth Recaro sports seats. Underneath the high-tech skin there’s a 4.0-litre water-cooled flat-six that Ruf modelled on an unburstable Mezger engine used in, among others, Turbo and GT3 variants of the 996 and 997. It revs to 8,270rpm, produces 510PS (375kW) and 471Nm (347lb ft) of torque, gets the SCR from 0-62mph in 3.4 seconds and keeps going until it hits 199mph.

A standard manual gearbox confirms the SCR as the purist's choice, as do its pushrod Sach suspension with remote reservoir dampers and carbon ceramic disc brakes with six-pot front and four-pot rear disc brakes. If there is a Ruf Nirvana, it looks like this.  

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Ruf RTR

The Ruf RTR is the company's modern interpretation of the Turbo 3.3, built to celebrate that model's 40th anniversary using a 991 chassis as a base. Like the original, you could have your RTR with either a faster narrow body or go for the arresting style of a wide body, with hand-crafted rear arches adding 410mm to the car's width. Both were also available with four or rear-wheel drive. Whichever version you go for, the RTR gets a large rear wing, redesigned front bumpers and Ruf's trademark five-spoke alloy wheels, hiding carbon ceramic brakes. 

Power comes from either a Ruf-fettled version of the 3.8-litre flat-six in the 991 Turbo producing 645PS (474kW), through a six-speed manual or seven-speed automatic, or a revised version of the Mezger engine in the 997 Turbo tuned to deliver a phenomenal 802PS (590kW), only available with a manual six-speed. 

The latter had a top speed of 218mph and could get from 0-62mph in 3.2 seconds. The finishing touch came in the form of an interior roll cage, and with just ten reportedly built, the RTR is rare even in the context of rare Rufs. 

 

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