Manufacturer | Porsche |
---|---|
Production | 1986–1989 (337 produced) |
Successor | Porsche 911 GT1 |
Class | Sports car |
Body style | 2-door coupé |
Layout | Rear-engine, four-wheel drive |
Engine | 2847 cc twin-turbocharged flat-6 |
Transmission | 6-speed manual |
Wheelbase | 2,272 mm (89.4 in) |
Length | 4,260 mm (168 in) |
Width | 1,840 mm (72 in) |
Height | 1,280 mm (50 in) |
Curb weight | 1,450 kg (3,200 lb) |
The Porsche 959 is a sports car manufactured by Porsche from 1986 to 1989, first as a Group B rally car and later as a legal production car designed to satisfy FIA homologation regulations requiring that a minimum number of 200 street legal units be built.
When Porsche began development of the 959, it looked toward Group B racing as a road-racing laboratory with which to develop technology for production cars. When Group B became focused on rallying events, however, Porsche felt the relevance to production cars was greatly reduced, and the goal of the 959 project shifted to frank state-of-the-art, cost-no-object technological innovation.
Porsche 959 Rally variant
In 1984, however, three 911s modified to 959 specifications (due to the requirement that Group B cars be based on production cars with at least 200 built) were used in the Paris-Dakar Rally, with Jacky Ickx the prime motivator. By 1985 the 959 rally variant was ready, but it experienced a disappointing start: all three cars failed to finish. However, in 1986 the 959 finished 1-2. The 959 was never seriously considered for a Group B Rally season; the cost of completing a full season far outweighed any technical information that would have been gained.
Porsche 959 also the one of 12 List of Fastest Cars in The World
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