The Type7 Porsche 992 S/T Built for Bangkok Is a Sonderwunsch in Signal Orange
By Chief Editor | 4/5/2026
Type7 documented a Porsche 992 S/T ordered through the Sonderwunsch bespoke programme for Bangkok collector Chanond Ruangkritya. The car is finished in Signal Orange, a heritage Porsche colour from the early 1970s, and was photographed by Stefan Bogner of Curves Magazine. Bogner describes it as a father-and-son project commissioned as a generational tribute.
Key Points
- The car is a 992-generation 911 S/T ordered through Porsche's Sonderwunsch bespoke programme in Signal Orange, a heritage colour from the early 1970s
- Stefan Bogner of Curves Magazine documented the build, describing it as a father-and-son project commissioned as a generational tribute
- Thailand's import duty structure of up to 200 percent makes a Sonderwunsch 992 S/T genuinely singular in Bangkok's collector car market
"Born in Stuttgart but built for Bangkok."
That is Type7's caption for the 992 S/T that Chanond Ruangkritya brought to them — a Porsche built through the Sonderwunsch programme, Porsche's bespoke division for clients who want a factory car that is not in the factory catalogue. The journalist who documented it is Stefan Bogner, the creative director behind Curves Magazine, a publication built around the intersection of automotive culture and landscape photography. He describes the project as "a father and son project," a family commission that was designed to outlast the generation that ordered it.
## What Sonderwunsch Actually Means
Sonderwunsch translates from German as "special wish." Porsche's Sonderwunsch programme is distinct from the standard Porsche Exclusive Manufaktur customization layer, which offers extended palette options, personalized interiors, and specification adjustments within the factory build process. Sonderwunsch sits above that: it is for configurations that are technically or aesthetically outside standard parameters, requiring direct collaboration between the client and Porsche's engineering and design teams.
The 992 S/T is already a limited production model — Porsche built approximately 1,963 units of the 992-generation 911 Sport Classic-adjacent S/T, all with the six-speed manual and the naturally aspirated flat-six. Specifying one through Sonderwunsch means the client went into a process that is typically reserved for people who want something that does not exist as a standard option.
Signal Orange is the colour. It is a Porsche heritage colour, running back to the early 1970s when it was factory-applied to both 914 and 911 models competing and commuting in the same era. On a 992 S/T — a car already intended as a tribute to the natural-aspiration era — Signal Orange is not an accessory choice. It is a declaration about what the car is supposed to represent.
## Chanond Ruangkritya and the Bangkok Market
The Bangkok context is significant. Thailand has a collector car market that functions differently from European and American equivalents — the barrier of import duties (up to 200 percent on some categories) means that high-specification or limited-production Porsches in Bangkok are genuinely rare by comparison to London, Los Angeles, or Tokyo. A Sonderwunsch 992 S/T in Signal Orange in Bangkok is not just a special order. It is a demonstrably singular object in its geography.
Chanond Ruangkritya is described as the recipient of a build that was framed as a generational tribute — the father-son project framing that Bogner uses echoes the Type7 feature on Dominik in Solothurn. There is a pattern here: the early 911 and 992 generation both attract clients for whom the car is not just an acquisition but an inheritance project, something meant to persist.
## The Photography
Type7 photographed the 992 S/T with a carousel that runs 18 frames. The images cycle through exterior details — the Signal Orange over the bumper lines, the wheel arch treatment, the ducktail treatment on the rear — and into cockpit and chassis specifics. The six-speed gate. The weave of the leather. The way Signal Orange turns in different light conditions, which is the real argument for why this colour was chosen: it is not stable, it changes with the angle and the hour.
Stefan Bogner's eye for landscape extends to these kinds of interior-detail sequences when he is shooting cars. He treats the 992 S/T the same way Curves Magazine treats a mountain pass — as a subject that rewards sustained attention rather than a single hero shot.
Topics: porsche, type7, 992-st, sonderwunsch, signal-orange, bangkok, collector-cars, stefan-bogner, curves-magazine, thailand, focus-58-77