Showing posts with label Porsche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Porsche. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

Porsche Macan on Review

Meet the Porsche Macan, a new 4x4 that sits below the Cayenne in the German company’s range, the Macan promises to be more agile and car-like to drive.A new factory has been built, at a cost of €500 million, to build the Macan, and Porsche expects to make 50,000 a year. Last year, Porsche sold 143,000 cars in total.
Porsche Macan

There are three versions: the S, S Diesel and Turbo. Despite the naming strategy, all three are powered by turbocharged V6 engines.Described by Porsche as the ‘most dynamic vehicle in the compact SUV segment,’ the Macan gets active all-wheel drive and a seven-speed PDK double-clutch transmission as standard. 0-62mph times are claimed to be 4.8sec, 5.4sec and 6.3sec for the Turbo, this packs a 3.6-litre bi-turbo V6 petrol which engine produces 400 hp, Macan S and Diesel S respectively. Top speeds for each car are 165mph, 158mph and 143mph.


A clever four-wheel drive system is standard and has been engineered by Porsche to send the majority of power to the rear wheels during normal driving but can send up to 100 percent of the engine’s torque to the front wheels if required, when driving off-road for instance.

Porsche Macan

The five-door silhouette is, at 4.7 metres long and 1.9 metres wide, substantial on the road, while height of more 1.6 metres means it towers above the 911: Porsche's iconic sports car is just 1.3 metres tall.It’s clearly SUV-shaped rather than sports car shaped.


As for rivals, is Land Rover’s Range Rover Evoque, along with the BMW X3 and Audi’s Q5 – a car that actually shares much of its structure with the new Macan.
Porsche Macan

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Wednesday, August 22, 2012

BMW M6 Convertible vs Porsche Boxster S



To begin with, BMW dubs this M6 as their fastest M ever, even though on the surface dropping two cylinders to your top-tier performance coupe seems like you’re going backwards. But then, adding two turbochargers in exchange isn’t such a bad tradeoff. Yes, you lose the sonic blast of the previous gen’s V-10, but the twin-turbo 4.4-liter V-8 willingly produces 560 bhp and 560 lb.-ft. of torque. Not to mention, the single-clutch automated manual gives way to an 8-speed dual-clutch unit.


The Porsche Boxster really didn’t need a wholesale redesign. Since its introduction in 1997, Porsche has tweaked, fiddled with, and upgraded the roadster nearly every year, keeping it feeling modern and fully competitive. Even in the outgoing generation’s final two model years, it remained the benchmark for its class, winning our Best-Handling Cars under $100K competition and taking home another couple of 10Best trophies. Despite the outgoing car’s inarguable excellence, the 2013 Boxster rides on a new platform.

BMW M6 Convertible



BMW M6 Convertible

The BMW M6 Convertible and Porsche Boxster S are in the vanguard of that preconception-busting, modern attitude. Between them, they produce 863bhp and 766lb ft of torque. Both accelerate from 0 to 62mph in less than five seconds (4.3 for the M6, 4.8 for the Boxster), and both will manage top speeds high enough for a non-surgical facelift (155mph: BMW, 172mph: Porsche).

Porsche Boxster S

Given these figures, it's hardly surprising that neither was lacking pace out on the track; even the serious supercars failed to pull away completely down the straights. And both put on speed with minimal fuss - planted foot, a couple of tugs on the paddles and hello to licence-losing rapidity. The slick, dual-clutch gearboxes help. You can arrive at a corner, bang down the 'box and get on the power early to sling up the straighter bits. Concentrate on mashing the throttle as soon as possible because of the instant and punchy power delivery.
Porsche Boxster S

BMW M6 Convertible vs Porsche Boxster S

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Porsche Boxster, Porsche’s baby roadster





There’s a generation of motoring journalists to whom Porsche will be only too glad to send a retirement card.

Anyone who was at the 1993 Detroit Auto Show will be at the top of that list. The snow lay thick and even outside Motown’s hotels, and in the show hall, the big three American car makers hadn’t bought much to capture the imagination.


A freezing yawnfest, then, until at its traditional morning press conference Porsche pulled the sheets off its Boxster concept. What a perfect little sports car. Tiny, with brilliant proportions that recalled the Fifties speedsters. Exquisite detailing that mixed chrome-rimmed instruments with amazing Zeppelin-style ventilation fans. This marked a downsizing revolution as luxury and sports car makers realised that the inexorable growth of their main models had opened up a gap for a smaller car. It was also the vanguard of a rush to retro.
Yet when we finally got our hands on the production Boxster in 1996, it was hard to believe that this bloated, less-than-lovely two-seater carried the same name. Porsche blamed crash safety, luggage and accommodation requirements and the big guy who ran away, but talk to the same executives these days and they admit that the production Boxster was too big.

It sold, inevitably perhaps, but in Germany the Boxster became known as the poor person’s Porsche and in Britain it gained a reputation as a hairdresser’s car.

So it was with some delight that I surveyed the changes to the current derivative. A longer wheelbase and wider track, yes, but also a flatter-raked screen, sculpted body sides and bigger side vents, which don’t add up to a huge amount, but they give the impression that the Boxster is happier in its own skin these days.

Climb in and you get that strange solvent smell of Porsche leather upholstery, as if it’s been marinating in money. The cabin is immaculate and slightly bonkers. There are the familiar Porsche dials with sans serif graphics writ large while the canted Boxster logo appears discreetly. The £2,141 radio/satnav/communications screen is huge and well served by buttons and dials, but search for the heater controls and you’ll be looking for a while. The important stuff is brilliant though, with a great driving position, perfect pedal heights and a wide windscreen framed at each side by the wing tops. You don’t get to see much out back, however, as the rollover bars and wind diffuser give the impression of fast-receding film credits on a 14in television set.

It’s surprising how tinny the engine sounds when you start it. That 2.7-litre flat six makes a fair old metallic clatter, but once under way it settles to guttural rasp, occasionally gurgling when you lift off the throttle, or booming like a dragon in a cake tin when you change down and stand on it. And stand on it you certainly can. Extend the revs to the soft-cut limiter at 8,000rpm in third gear and you’ll be doing 120mph. Not that it’s a smooth ride up to the red line, for while the revs climb inexorably, the power surges and lunges against the adjusting cam timing.


This is a 164mph car, capable of accelerating from 0-62mph in 5.8sec and delivering a Combined fuel economy of 34.5mpg.

Two versions of the Boxster are available; standard with a 2.7-litre flat six as tested and the Boxster S with a 3.4-litre unit shared with the 911 Carrera. Both engines have thermal energy management, engine stop-start and brake-energy recuperation, which makes them more efficient, with about 15 per cent better fuel consumption. There’s also a coasting system, which cuts in when trailing the accelerator to reduce the braking effect.

There’s the choice of a seven-speed PDK twin-clutch transmission, or a lovely, positive, short-throw six-speed manual as tested. The steering has been upgraded to the electrically assisted helm of the 911 and is the toast of such systems.

The tyres fitted to the optional 20in rims compromise the handling, giving a slightly darty turn-in to corners and a nervous feel on uneven surfaces. For all those initial criticisms though, the standard Boxster is an extraordinarily effective driving machine. It turns into corners and settles in the turn quickly. As might be expected with the rear-engine configuration, the Boxster slides as a piece, but is easily gathered up. And while the ride quality leaves something to be desired, there is some suppleness, so you aren’t crashing about in the potholes. You can feel the body shaking occasionally, but the Boxster must be one of the stiffest sports cars in the business.

The Cayman remains the best driver’s proposition, but that’s not what the Boxster is about. It’s a car to drive briskly, with the hood down, not at the bitter edges of roadholding with a frown of concentration, but with a smile and a lightness of spirit.
That’s why we’d eschew the larger-engine option of the S, plus the £1,084 Sport Chrono Package with its harder gearbox mounts, the £890 Porsche torque vectoring limited-slip differential and all the other furbelows of going ever faster.
The standard car has what it takes and what you need and, while it’s still too big, it now drives far more like the sports machine that Porsche promised almost 20 years ago.


THE FACTS

Porsche Boxster

Tested: 2.7-litre flat-six, six-spd manual, RWD
Price/on sale: From £37,589/now
Power/torque: 261bhp @ 6,700rpm/207lb ft @ 4,500rpm
Top speed: 164mph
Acceleration: 0-62mph in 5.8sec
Fuel economy: 24.8mpg (EU Urban)/ 25.2mpg on test
CO2 emissions: 192g/km
VED band: J £460 (then £250)
Verdict: The best Boxster ever is also good value provided you’re sparing with options
Rating: 4 of 5 star

RIVALS

BMW Z4, from £29,480
One of the most successful results of Chris Bangle’s weirdification of the BMW range, this mark II still lacks a dynamic edge, and the top model version has atrocious ride and handling.

Nissan 370Z Roadster, from £32,095
Nissan’s V6 has lots of go, but the soft-top compromises handling of the cheaper coupĂ©. Out-gunned by the Boxster, but front-engined thrills aplenty.

Mercedes-Benz SLK, from £29,980
Front-engined two-seater from Porsche’s Stuttgart rival. Far more capable than its predecessors, but the styling is brash. Four-cylinder turbo petrol engines are best.

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