Showing posts with label PORSCHE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PORSCHE. Show all posts

Sunday, August 28, 2011

2012 Porsche 911 Carrera and Carrera S Pics and Reviews

The Porsche 911 became an icon almost the instant it arrived nearly 50 years ago, so when it comes up for a redesign, relatively small steps have usually won the day.


Bowing at the 2011 Frankfurt auto show, the seventh-generation 911 Carrera and Carrera S may look to follow that pattern at first blush, but there are some radical changes albeit not as large as the shift from air- to water-cooled engines underneath the largely familiar shape.

Iconic Details, Bigger Package

Indeed, as we’ve seen from a preponderance of spy shots, Porsche designers made sure the new 991 generation looks the part. Its iconic fender shapes, ovoid headlamps, and fast tail remain, but it looks fresher and sleeker. The nose has a more aggressive lower fascia, although the LED running lights are still located directly atop the intakes.

The headlamps gain more complex innards, and the side mirrors move from the A-pillar to the door. Around back, the taillight elements are squinted and smaller, the chunky blocks around the license plate have fallen off, and the quad exhaust finishers are replaced with a more understated duo of outlets.




Sitting lower overall, the stretched wheelbase (by 3.9 inches) gives the car a lower stance, an impression furthered by the wider front track. Porsche is withholding full specifications, but we’re told the overall length is only slightly up from the 997 generation. The new body makes more use of aluminum and Porsche says it’s 100 pounds lighter. It retains the same 0.29 Cd, and now is said to have virtually no front or rear lift, thanks in part to a wider, variably extending rear spoiler.



The new cabin reflects the Porsche Carrera GT–like design that’s marked new Porsches since the Panamera, with a sloped center tunnel placing the shifter closer to the steering wheel. The execution is simpler than in the Panamera or Cayenne, though, with fewer buttons. The traditional five-pod instrument cluster keeps a large tachometer in the center, while a useful multifunction color display finds a home to the right of that. The 2+2 seating layout remains, but don’t expect those tiny back seats to offer much more room even with the extra space between the wheels.



The Juicy Stuff

The 911 is a driver’s car, and our extensive experience in a prototype confirmed that Porsche kept dynamics at the top of its priority list. We’ll have to wait for a turn behind the wheel of the finished product, though, before our fears are allayed regarding the 2012 911’s electro-mechanical power-steering system. We wouldn’t normally be this skeptical, but a big steering change made in recent BMWs—to a fully electric system—resulted in a numb tiller, so we’re feeling a bit burned. A Porsche spokesman, however, tells us that the setup is specific to the 911 and that “the steering is the most important part of a Porsche.”



Other mechanical updates include a new engine for the base Carrera. Downsized by 0.2 liter from its previous iteration, the 3.4-liter flat-six (it’s different from the 3.4 found in the Cayman and Boxster) in the 991 will make 5 more hp than the 3.6, for a total of 350. The Carrera S will get 400 hp from its 3.8-liter, an increase of 15. Porsche claims a PDK-equipped Carrera will hit 60 mph in 4.4 seconds, or 4.2 when dispatched with the assistance of the optional Sport Chrono package’s launch control. Those times drop to 4.1 and 3.9 seconds for the Carrera S. We figure we’ll see a tenth or two better than Porsche’s estimates. Maximum velocity is 179 mph in the base car and 188 mph in the S. Learn More...

Friday, June 24, 2011

2011 Porsche Cayenne S Turbo Hybrid Specs, Pics, Prices and Reviews

Longtime Porsche fans were largely appalled when the company introduced the Cayenne in 2003.



How could a company that used to manufacture 911 lug nuts out of aluminum to save a few grams introduce an SUV whose weight in some versions approached 6000 pounds even though it could barely hold five adults?

2012 Porsche 911 GT3 RS 4.0 Specs, Pics, and Reviews

It seems as though Porsche itself were caught off guard by the announcement of this special-edition 911. The company had shut down the line that would normally build the engine for a car like this, so when the brass decided they needed one final 997, Porsche had to restart production.



The GT3 is, of course, the purest 911, which makes a GT3 derivative the appropriate final send-off for the 997 before the arrival of the 991.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

2012 Porsche Panamera Turbo S Specs, Prices and Reviews

It’s not that any Porsche Panamera lacks power. The 300-hp V-6 is quick, the 380-hp hybrid and the 400-hp V-8 are quicker still, and the 500-hp Turbo well, let’s just say we’ve squeezed a 3.3 second 0 to 60 run out of that 4400 pound rocket. But this is Porsche, and where a Turbo exists, a Turbo S isn’t far behind.


So here is the Panamera Turbo S, more powerful by 50 hp, thanks to a modified ECU, and more responsive, thanks to modified turbochargers with titanium-aluminum turbine blades. The basic design of the Turbo model’s twin-turbocharged 4.8-liter V-8 remains unchanged.

The Mid vs Rear-Engine Debate Porsche Cayman R vs. 911 GT3

This is where we venture beyond customary performance tests to decipher two of car enthusiasm’s enduring mysteries: Does spotting the engine in the optimum location—in the middle of the car—yield demonstrably better handling? And can engineering theory trounce painstaking practice?

Porsche’s 2012 Cayman R, the hottest mid-engined model in Porsche’s current lineup, represents the theory side of the equation. This is the thinking man’s sports car—light, stripped, and hunkered down for utmost agility. Aluminum door skins, a bare-bones interior, carbon-fiber seat structures, and new 19-inch wheels hold the curb weight to 3076 pounds. Air conditioning and audio-entertainment equipment are optional. Porsche’s 3.4-liter, direct-injection flat-six has been goaded to 330 horsepower at 7400 rpm, a 10-hp gain over the standard Cayman S. While price doesn’t count in this analysis, the Cayman R starts at $67,250, a pocket-warming $12,700 less than a base 911.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

New Porsche 918 hybrid Review


Porsche 918 hybrid-front view

Finally for you Porsche lovers may be glad because the Porsche’s official have opened the bookings list of Porsche 918 plug in hybrid. But, you have to quickly enter your name into list queue because Porsche will produce only 918 units. Porsche plug-in hybrid equipped with 4.0-liter V8 engine and powered 500 horsepower plus 7-speed transmission. Actually the machine is adapted from Porsche RS Spyder.

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