992 Carrera, Carrera S and GTS
992.1 Carrera /S/4S/GTS — Performance Parts by Dundon Motorsports
The 992.1 generation modernized the everyday 911 without losing its core feel. Carrera, Carrera S, and later GTS models share a compact rear-engine balance, a calm, confidence-building chassis, and powertrains that make real speed feel easy. The S delivered 443 hp from a twin-turbo 3.0 flat-six, while the base Carrera was rated at 379 hp; the GTS arrived with 473 hp and a broader performance envelope—numbers that translate to seamless thrust and long-legged pace on American highways and back roads alike. Optional rear-axle steering on S and GTS sharpened agility at low speed and added stability as speeds climbed, expanding the car’s bandwidth without erasing its civility. Up front the 992 architecture retained a MacPherson-strut layout with an anti-roll bar, paired to a multi-link rear axle—compact, efficient, and a great foundation for precision geometry work. Those structural choices are why thoughtful upgrades pay off so clearly in feel, tire life, and consistency as temperatures rise.
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Track-Ready Suspension Upgrades
Our approach with the 992.1 is simple: respect what Porsche nailed, and unlock the headroom the platform keeps in reserve. As pace builds, small limits show up—narrow factory alignment range, rubber compliance that lets geometry wander, and outer shoulders that work harder than they should. When you address fundamentals, the car gets quieter in your hands. Turn-in firms up without nervousness, mid-corner balance stays put longer into a session, and traction off the apex feels more repeatable. The goal isn’t to turn your 992.1 into a race car; it’s to reveal the clarity and control the chassis already has, and to do it in a way that still feels appropriate on a Wednesday commute.
This is why most owners start with a suspension package for 992.1 Carrera, a suspension package for 992.1 Carrera S, or a suspension package for 992.1 GTS. The hardware mix opens up real camber, caster, and toe so you can run a proper alignment that holds after curbs and heat cycles. Extended-length tie rods for 992.1 maintain safe engagement when you add negative camber or modest front track width; lower control arm solutions with precision shims give you repeatable settings you can return to; adjustable tension arms let you set caster accurately so the wheel talks honestly on initial load; and matched rear control arms keep toe and camber stable when you lean on the throttle or stand on the brakes. The result is steering that loads progressively rather than suddenly, a platform that stays settled over imperfect surfaces, and tires that wear evenly across the tread instead of sacrificing the outer edge. Those changes feel obvious whether your car is a Carrera, S, or GTS, and whether you drive it across states or point it at your local circuit.