How to build an F1-engined Porsche 911

20 Jul 2024

He was “adamant” that the standard cars had to appear as the mule would have in its day, so he forced clients to pick from Porsche colours and materials. “It wasn’t a ‘Pimp My Ride’ car,” Lanzante jokes, noting that the TAG Turbo 911 has a sunroof, electric mirrors and its original steering wheel.

F1 - Figure 1
Photo Autocar

But one particularly important customer – the owner of Alain Prost’s 1985 championship-winning McLaren MP4/2 – wanted more punch than the 503bhp afforded by the ‘regular’ TAG 911.

“We’ve had a lot of criticism,” he says, but “they [McLaren] ran four bars of boost. We run three. We’ve lowered the compression ratio because we run regular fuel and they were running race fuel”. It’s a “trade-off” between power and usability, Lanzante says.

Such is this client’s clout that Lanzante expanded its plans to comprise three ‘Championship’ cars celebrating each title won by TAG-engined McLarens. These are boosted to 625bhp and shed 400kg of weight, bringing them down to 920kg (dry).

They will be painted in reference to the helmet liveries of the drivers who won each championship: the first in Alain Prost’s French flag, and the other two in Niki Lauda’s Austria-Marlboro strip.

Expanding on the Championship edition’s new details, Lanzante says: “The seatbelts have Hugo Boss written on. The steering wheel is made by Personal and trimmed in suede – not Alcantara. It’s all period-correct. The gearlever is the same design as in the F1 car, and the wheels were made by Dymag from the original drawings scaled up, so the spoke pattern matches the F1 wheel.” 

Traction control is included as a concession to drivability – ”a sort of safety measure” – but “this is a little bit more brutal,” Lanzante says.

Although the three Championship cars were not originally in the plan, Lanzante is firm in his commitment to building just 14 TAG Turbos in total. He is of course limited by the number of engines available – and has purchased one extra as an “insurance policy for everybody” – but would not press the engine back into production.

Lanzante says: “You could remake that engine, remake the castings and all of that. But a lot of people who’ve bought this, it’s not about lap times. This isn’t that.

“This is: you are driving a beautiful car, and you’re driving a car that a Formula 1 driver has campaigned in a Formula 1 race week. That’s the special thing. That is what most of the people have bought this for. How many people would be able to buy a [McLaren] MP4? There’s a few, but how many people would be able to get in and drive it? Very few.

F1 - Figure 2
Photo Autocar

“I could remake it, but it wouldn’t have the same soul to it. It’s the fact that it’s an original engine. It’s that we borrowed the original car from McLaren and scanned it. If I knocked out a load more of these, there’d be no point.”

The TAG 911 was “the hardest” project ever undertaken by Lanzante, he says.

So how to follow it up? “The truth is, I don’t know.”

Lanzante elaborates: “A lot of people have said: ‘You’ve done a Porsche project. Are you going to do another?’ It’s a saturated market. I want to lead with something new, not just follow what everybody else is doing. I’m not knocking anyone: I don’t want to be just another. I want to stand on my own.”

But days after our chat, Lanzante’s team makes a big statement.

One of the other stars of the Festival of Speed was the Red Bull RB17, an Adrian Newey-designed track weapon packing an 1184bhp hybrid V10.

Charlie Martin

Title: Editorial Assistant, Autocar

As a reporter, Charlie plays a key role in setting the news agenda for the automotive industry. He joined Autocar in July 2022 after a nine-month stint as an apprentice with sister publication, What Car?. He's previously contributed to The Intercooler, and placed second in Hagerty’s 2019 Young Writer competition with a feature on the MG Metro 6R4. 

He is the proud owner of a Fiat Panda 100HP, and hopes to one day add a lightweight sports car like an Alpine A110 or a Lotus Elise S1 to his collection.

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