Wheels Australia – August 2019

(Axel Boer) #1

the exhaust note still misses some
deep and guttural boisterousness.
Like in the Cayenne, the twin-turbo
4.0-litre V8 produces 404kW from
5750-6000rpm and 770Nm between
1960-4500rpm. The needle arrives at
the 100km/h marker in just 3.9sec.
Top speed for the Turbo and S is
286km/h, aided by the Coupe’s unique
trio of spoilers. There is the obvious
roof-mounted wing that also acts as a
styling piece, as well as a lower boot
lip, which itself sits on a trick active
spoiler that extends 135mm from the
boot at speeds over 90km/h.
The Coupe is incredibly athletic for
an SUV of over two tonnes. Its new
48-volt electrical architecture allows
for lightning-quick computations and
response from its components, like the
three-chamber air suspension, traction
control and a more powerful anti-roll
system. The result is a flat ride with
stonking grip and corner speed.


If you were sitting in the passenger
seat, eyelids shut, you could easily
think you were in something much
smaller, but just as capable.
The weakness of the SUV is its
weight and loss of communication
through the front end when really
digging into corners. Porsche’s PSM
Sport traction control system, along
with the fact it’s AWD, does plenty to
save the front-end from washing out,
but feedback and feel through the
tiller can become a touch numb as the
tyres are put under stress.
The 10-piston front, four-piston rear
fixed-caliper brakes further defy the
perception of SUV abilities, gripping
with incredible strength on 415mm
and 365mm internally vented discs.
The three-way dampers in their
most comfortable setting segue to
a softly sprung ride that soaks up
bumps and lumps along the road, even
on the Turbo’s huge 22-inch alloys.

Inside you’ll find the same general
layout as the Cayenne wagon; an
expansive dash with a huge 12.3-
inch infotainment system and digital
driver instrumentation that are bright,
crisp, and easy to use. The fabric and
partial-leather seats are classy, and
the standard two-seat rear set-up looks
far sportier than the three pews that
can be optioned for no cost. The boot
is 145-litres smaller in the Coupe, but
still a relatively large 625L overall.
The only real contrast between the
Coupe and normal Cayenne inside is
space in the back. Headroom shrinks
as the roof rakes down over the rear
seats, but the optional carbonfibre
roof opens up the cavity overhead


  • the lighter ceiling actually does
    more for rear space than the standard
    panoramic roof
    And that’s the crux of the Cayenne
    Coupe, a performance-focused SUV
    that has nipped away excess for extra
    performance without a noticeable
    sacrificetocomfort.Andvisually,it’s
    a betterPorscheSUV,too.
    ALEXRAE


Supreme SUV ability; powerful V8;
classy, tech-laden interior

Expensive;V8couldsoundmeaner;
panoramicroofkillsheadroom

PLUS MINUS

@wheelsaustralia 47

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