Alois Ruf is the warrior monk of the Porsche business, religiously dedicated to high performance. His shop in the tiny village of Pfaffenhausen to the west of Munich is a place where people from all over the world come to get in touch with the true spirit of Porsche. In a Ruf Porsche, they discover a meticulously reengineered automobile, not a tuner car with bolt-on equipment.
Occasionally even monks will make liquor, and so it is with the new, limited-production RK Coupe, a triple-distilled Porsche Cayman with specialty bodywork to match the specialty hardware. Like the Ruf RK Spyder (a modified Boxster) introduced in 2005, the bodywork comes from Studiotorino, a loose association of craftsmen in Turin, Italy, led by Alfredo Stola. As sketched for Stola by Aldo Brovarone, who designed the original Ferrari Dino concept for Pininfarina in 1965, the two-passenger RK Coupe still looks like a Cayman to us, but the long, restyled roof gives it a kind of operatic drama. There are lots of handcrafted details, including hidden electronic door latches. Some forty-nine RK Coupes will be built, and the U.S.... Read full article