Autocar UK – 28 August 2019

(Grace) #1

Prototype’s interior remained disguised but optional hi-def screens have since been revealed


FIRST DRIVES


28 AUGUST 2019 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 25


And that is quite enough about


the Taycan’s static qualities. You sit


low i n t he c a r, i n l i ne w it h Por s c he ’s


determination to present the Taycan


as a sporting, driver’s machine,


despite its mass, electric powertrain,


four doors and (reasonably) spacious


c a bi n. Shut y ou r e y e s a nd y ou c ou ld


a l mo s t b e i n a 911.


Press a button to put the car in


standby mode and depress a little


le v e r t o k no c k it i nt o d r i v e. We e a s e


away from the Weissach test track


and out onto the public road.


The strange thing here is that,


even having spent many hours in


the Taycan’s passenger seat in the


Arctic, I still don’t really know what
t o e x p e c t. Fa c t i s t h at w h i le e le c t r ic

cars from major manufacturers


are becoming considerably more


common, there has still never been


one like this, or even remotely so. For


all the apparent familiarity, this still


feels like the biggest voyage into the


unknown for years.


And yet... Sitting in this brand-new


car with its brand-new platform and


powertrain, here’s something very


familiar. It feels like a Porsche. Not


like a Cayenne or Panamera but –


and it feels silly saying it, given the


weight of the car and the length of


its wheelbase – something closer to


a 911. And I’ve not done 30mph yet.


It’s all about the steering: the heft,


the precision, the off-centre linearity


all are cut straight from the Porsche


sports car textbook.


I find it utterly surprising and


profoundly reassuring, not least


because now we’re out of Weissach


a nd t i me i s shor t. I h av e t o d r i v e f a s t


right away, despite every other seat


being occupied by Porsche engineers.


I don’t much like driving rapidly with


anyone in the car, let alone overseen


by the best in the business, but there


is no choice.


The Turbo S (if that is its name) is


fast enough to make you feel giddy


on overboost. The torque delivery is


s o i n s t a nt , t he a c c e le r at ion s o v iole nt


and explosive, that it’s brief ly not that
pleasant an experience. And that’s

with 700bhp. I don’t find it hard to


imagine what any one of the growing


mob of 2000bhp electric hypercars


will be like: I find it impossible.


The rate doesn’t really abate until


y ou’r e w e l l i nt o l ic e nc e -lo si n g


territory, and you’ll be fearing for


your liberty before it becomes in any


way normal.


The sound? Unmistakably


electric, for sure, but not unpleasant ◊


CONTROLLING


THE TAYCAN


Despite its weight, the Taycan’s


chassis engineers insist that at


and over the limit, the Taycan is


the most controllable Porsche


made today. It is certainly capable


of the most extravagant yet easily


recovered drifts, but why?


First, it has the lowest centre


of gravity of any current Porsche


and almost as low as that of the


918 Spyder hypercar. Second, it
has near-ideal weight distribution,

at 49% front, 51% rear. Third, and


most important, is the speed at


which it can react both to inputs


from the driver and information


from the road. The throttle


response is five times quicker than


that of an internal combustion


engine and its ability to react to


detected wheel slip no less than 10


times faster, at a brain-boggling


two milliseconds.


As for fears of the car having to


limit power after repeated use, one


Taycan completed 26 back-to-


back launch control runs from rest


to 125mph, after which the test


had to be abandoned not through


weakness of the car’s powertrain


but of its driver’s stomach.

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