Autocar UK – 28 August 2019

(Grace) #1

Thanks to its impressively controlled ride and near-silent powertrain, the Taycan makes for an immensely effective GT car


TESTER’S NOTE


Turbos come with


2 0 i n o r 2 1 i n r i m s , th e


former fitted with a


low-rolling-resistance


tyre worth an extra


nine miles of range. If


you want low-rollers


on your Turbo S,


tough: you can’t. AF


24 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 28 AUGUST 2019


F


or reasons I think I understand,


this story feels different. Every


week, we go some place to drive


some thing, and lucky we are


to do so. But to drive the first all-


electric Porsche – well that, surely,


is different. Different because


Porsche and electricity seem as


natural a fit as fire and ice. Different


because if Porsche really can pull


it off and produce the world’s first


e le c t r ic pr o duc t ion d r i v e r ’s c a r, t he


ramifications could be enormous.


But, for Porsche, perhaps not quite so


e nor mou s i f it c a n not.


Because of the way the media


is micro-managed these days,


e s p e c i a l l y w it h c a r s a s i mp or t a nt
as this, there is still much about the

Porsche Taycan I am not allowed


to say, because the car has yet even


to be unveiled. So far as official


information is concerned, all that


exists is what Porsche published


when it revealed the Mission E


concept in 2015, most of which is now


obsolete. So if what follows seems


more speculative than factual, you


could nevertheless conclude that I


know rather more than I’m saying,


because not being specific was a


condition of getting in the car. I shall


therefore leave it to you to decide


how w e l l i n for me d s uc h s p e c u l at ion


might be. In the words of Francis


Urquhart: ‘You might think that.


I couldn’t possibly comment...’


There are, in fact, two Taycans,


at le a s t t h at Por s c he i s ow n i n g up t o.


Actually, there’s certainly a third and


very probably a fourth, but in these
days of top-down launches, these

are less powerful versions that have


yet to be seen or driven, officially or


otherwise. Which leaves us with the


two top cars, widely rumoured to


b e c a l l e d Tu r b o a n d Tu r b o S , i n l i n e


with Porsche’s naming convention.


(I know it seems strange given


neither even has an engine let alone


a turbocharger, but we’ll get used


t o it .) B ot h h av e bat t e r ie s r at e d


above 90kWh and standard power


outputs substantially in excess of


600bhp. The difference (besides the


S having ceramic brakes, a stiffer


set-up, standard four-wheel steering


and 21in wheels clothed in high-


performance tyres) is that while both


will ‘overboost’ for 2.5sec at the time,


the S will do so rather more, raising


its total output to well over 700bhp,


w it h i n e xc e s s of 75 0lb f t.


So while the car is predictably


heavy – think something around


the 2.25-tonne mark – so too is it


blindingly quick. The 0-62mph time


of the Mission E was quoted at 3.2sec,


and I’d expect a Taycan Turbo S to be


as far below the three-second mark as


the E was above it.


When I drove both cars in


prototype form, their interiors were


completely camouf laged but have


since been revealed to feature next-


generation high-definition imaging


that, if you choose the optional


passenger information display,


provides TFT screens almost from


w a l l t o w a l l a c r o s s t he e nt i r e w idt h


of the car. It looks quite intimidating


but, in terms of the admittedly


limited operations I was able to use,


it all works fairly intuitively.

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