Tom O'Kelly's Porsche 997 Carrera 2S 3.8 | Testimonial & Pictures | Stage 1
- Tom's Car - Stage 1
- Milltek stainless steel exhaust system, Revo mapping & modified 997 intake system
- Tom's Car - Stage 2
- GT3 brake conversion, K&N induction kit, wheel spacer shims & colour-coded Aero kit with GT3 intakes & grills
- Tom's Car - Stage 3
- GT3 sway bar, 997 Turbo Design wheels with Michelin tyres & Turbo style Titanium look chrome tailpipes
- Tom's Car - Stage 4
- Sachs sprung clutch, Single Mass flywheel, Eurocup induction system, Bilstein B16 dampers & EuroCupGT Remap
- A gallery with all of the pictures and a full list of modifications
Tom's Testimonial - Stage 1 Modifications (list of modifications)
“Got a comparison between re-map and no re-map on my car. As per my slight cynicism on the manufacturer claims, the power gains were there but not massive. 22 hp and 11 lb ft more at peak. However this is only half the story - the comparison between remap on and re-map off also showed quite a difference in drive ability - Peak torque with the remap is pretty much from 3k revs all the way to 7k revs - without re-map peak torque its 3.5k to about 5.75k. So I get peak pull for almost twice as many rev's as well as a slightly higher total value.”
“The power curve with the re-map is very smooth and mitigate a number of flat spots in the "normal curve" - most notably at around 5750rpm to 6250rpm where the power curve goes flat well below peak. At this stage with the re-map it is already passing the max non-remapped power. It is a smooth curve with only a slightly lower rate of power increase per rev. So on the road it should be pulling much harder than the stock car at this point.”
“The guys at the rolling road were deeply impressed with the overall power and torque curves and felt it was significantly better than the standard set up. They also remarked that the throttle response and willingness to rev was substantially better with the re-map. However these guys are not Porsche specialists so I will be looking to get a second opinion.”
“The guys at the rolling road were a little cautious as to whether they had a fully accurate peak power reading, but were fully confident that they captured the before and after differences. They kept emphasizing the relative differences rather than the absolute values. They don't do many Porsche's so they were a bit wary of being quoted.”
“The initial findings by my local rolling road guys bear out how the car feels on the road - it goes like a scalded cat from 3k - 7k, mirroring the flat peak torque curve across the range - it also pulls persistently harder as I rev, matching the smooth increase in power on the curve and seemed much faster at the upper end as well as the 2.5k - 4k end. Again this mirrors the torque curve and the more responsive power curve at these points.”
“Porscheshop set the throttle response for me at 7 on a scale of 1-9 so no surprise its very sensitive to throttle inputs and responds much more quickly to changes than the standard set up.”
“The canning the car got from Chris and I on its set up run and on the drive and dine has really brought the sound out of the exhaust now - its making a very nice growl.”
“A couple of learning points here though - firstly the power curves in the Porsche gumph are it turns out from an engine on a dyno. They do the same to get power and torque figures. So not when connected to the rest of the oily bits, exhaust, filters etc. This then changes the actual power/torque curves you get on your car. Talking to my independent, all manufacturers do this - which is why my description of the basic curve does not fully reflect the near perfect graph in the sales gumph. Lesson 1 learned.”
“Lesson 2, having got a nice loud exhaust - its loud, once it cuts past 3k revs its a fairly noticeable noise in the cabin. Fine when pressing on but a little monotonous on the motorway at constant speed. Conveniently this equates to low - middle 70's. So for commuting this will now encourage me to stick it on cruise control at 70 on the motorway where the car is nice and quiet.”
“Lesson 3 - manufactures quoted "power increases". i was a little cynical about how much difference some of the changes would make - if you added all the values up it was suggesting another 40-60hp. Which I was a little wary of. This is where Porscheshop earned there stripes because they were much more conservative and focused on the improved drive ability you'd get and the faster on road progress (plus better noise from the exhaust) rather than going for top end power figures.”
“To be honest that was what I was after more pull through the rev range, better overtaking capability and a but more responsiveness in the throttle and acceleration. Which seems to be what I've ended up with so I am happy.”
Stage 1 Modifications made to Tom's car (testimonial)
- Full Milltek stainless steel exhaust system
- Revo Stage2 mapping
- Modified 997 intake kit with Green filters
- Racing Blue brake fluid
Pages: | Stage 1 mods | | | Stage 2 mods | | | Stage 3 mods | | | Stage 4 mods | | | All photos & mods |