2022 Porsche 911 GT3 is as close to a race car as you can get

Few vehicles embody the concept of a precision tool better than the 2022 Porsche 911 GT3, and, like any fine tool, the GT3 demands respect.

Use a Randall knife as a screwdriver and you’re likely to lose a thumb. Likewise, if you use the 911 GT3 for your everyday driver, your ears and spine will be assaulted by one of the sportiest vehicles to bear a license plate.

But you’ll look, sound and perform like few others on track days.

That’s the point of the 911 GT3: to distill Porsche’s unmistakable sports car to its essence. From sound insulation in the cabin to steering response to ride comfort, the 911 is built for speed, not comfort. Sure, the interior is swathed in leather and suede, the optional two-tone alloy wheels slay and the navigation system is world-class. But don’t mistake the GT3 for a luxury car. Every inch and ounce has been honed to a fine edge for performance.

The 911 is Porsche’s torchbearer, born in 1964 to race. Despite nearly 60 years of advances in comfort and driver assistance, the GT3 is a 502-horsepower reminder of that.

How much?

Prices for the 2022 911 GT3 start at $161,100, excluding a $1,350 destination fee and $1,700 gas guzzler tax. (The two-seater gets just 14 mpg in city driving, the sort of figure more frequently associated with delivery vans than 198-mph two-seaters.)

A normally aspirated 4.0L horizontally opposed six-cylinder engine that produces 502 horsepower and 347 pound-feet of torque is standard. The GT3 comes only in the coupe body style, just like the 911 GT3 Cup race car that use the same fast-revving, growling engine.

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A six-speed manual and seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmissions are available for the base price. The fact that Porsche offers a manual transmission in such a focused performance car speaks volumes about 911 owners. They understand the manual is slower from 0-60 mph — 3.7 vs. 3.2 seconds. They don’t care. Their understanding of driving real performance requires them to work the shifter and clutch continuously around the track. It’s part of the fun, and the GT3 is all about fun.

2022 Porsche 911 model line and prices

Carrera: $102,550

Carrera 4: $109,850

Carrera S: $118,450

Targa 4: $122,650

Carrera 4S: $125,750

Carrera GTS: $138,050

Targa 4S: $138,550

Carrera 4 GTS: $143,350

Targa 4 GTS: $158,150

GT3: $163,750

GT3 Touring: $164,150

Turbo: $176,650

Edition 50 Years Porsche Design: $185,150

Turbo S: $208,350

Prices include $1,350 destination charge, but exclude gas-guzzler charge, where applicable.

Source: Edmunds

How is a 911 like a pickup truck?

The 911 product line covers a vast price range from the Carrera at $102,550, to the $208,350 Turbo S. It includes coupes, targas and convertibles, rear and all-wheel-drive models, turbocharged and normally aspirated models. That allows Porsche to build models precisely for small audiences who know exactly what they want and will happily pay for it. U.S. full-size pickups are probably the only other vehicles on the road that cover such a broad spectrum — in their case from gardeners’ work trucks to luxurious crew cabs and six-figure heavy duty models towing million-dollar show horses and RVs.

I tested a 911 GT3 with the manual six-speed and options including black and red leather and Race-Tex seats; a 23.-7-gallon extended range gas tank; black and red alloy wheels; staggered tires (20-inch front and 21-inch rear); a suspension that can lift the front axle 1.2 inches for speed bumps and driveways and dynamic LED headlights.

It stickered at $174,740, excluding destination charge and federal gas guzzler tax.