Evo India

PORSCHE PANAMERA 4S

A V8 diesel should be the perfect partner for Porsche’s distance devouring four-door. Emphasis on ‘should’…

-

SSINCE THE FIRST examples of Porsche’s first four-door coupe were delivered in 2009, it has been clear that a torque-rich, blown V8 diesel would suit the car well. Such an engine would give the Panamera the perfect blend of range and performanc­e, further enhancing its ability to cover monster miles in one sitting. Now that engine is here.

For its new Panamera 4S Diesel, Porsche has plucked the same 4-litre V8 from the VW Group’s engine shelf as Audi uses for its SQ7 SUV. Although it foregoes the electric turbocharg­ers of the Audi, it does feature ‘hot-vee’ turbos between the two banks of four cylinders. The resulting 416bhp peak power (2bhp more than a 996 Turbo) arrives at 3500rpm and hangs around through to 5000rpm, with the 850Nm slab of torque waiting for you from 1000rpm through to 3250rpm. There’s also a new eightspeed double-clutch gearbox driving all four wheels through Porsche’s electronic­ally controlled multi-plate-clutch four-wheel drive system. There won’t, however, be a rear-wheel drive variant with this engine for now.

While the 4S Diesel comes equipped with convention­al steel springs and active dampers as standard, until autumn 2017 you can only order it with the optional (and expensive) air-suspension as per our test car, which is also fitted with rearaxle steering and speed-sensitive power steering.

The original Panamera came in for a mixed response, primarily because it had looks only a mother could love and for some Porsche aficionado­s it wasn’t a 928 replacemen­t. It was, however, a mighty fine way to travel four-up at speed and not be disappoint­ed when the autobahn stopped and the straight bits between the apexes got shorter. An M5 was sharper and more focused, but the Panamera was more rounded.

This new model is more resolved visually. The rear in particular is more bloated 911 (in a good way) than featureles­s saloon, while inside it’s a design revolution. Out goes the Casio calculator-style button-fest, in comes an Apple-like touch-sensitive glass screen and enough tech and infotainme­nt equipment to fill a PC World warehouse – Porsche has finally arrived in the 21st century when it comes to connectivi­ty.

Further good news is that the Panamera still has a sports car feel

The only letdown is the element I expected so much from: the engine

to the driving position: low-slung, cockpit wrapped around you, steering wheel pulled tight to your chest, legs out straight. And it still flows down the road with a mix of grace and agility that a five-metre-long, 2050kg saloon has no right to exhibit, the rear-axle steering instantly making its presence felt on your first committed drive. The Panamera 4S Diesel is as intuitive to position in a corner, as quick to react to your inputs and as direct in its responses as many of Porsche’s traditiona­l sports cars.

The only letdown is the element I expected so much from: the engine. It’s got plenty of power, a mountain of torque and the eight-speed PDK ’box is nicely matched, but unless you select Sport mode to sharpen the throttle response and enliven the V8, it feels flat, unresponsi­ve and no more potent than the old V6 diesel. Perhaps our test car needed more kilometres on it (it had covered fewer than 3200), but where I expected a surging shove and instant response there was a pause, a considerat­ion and only a mildly stronger push in the direction you were heading.

It feels as though the car’s potential is being handicappe­d by its three driving modes. A tweak to make the engine’s Sport setting the norm would solve this issue, but shouldn’t a Porsche feel sporty by default? Until it does, we’ll stick with petrolpowe­red Panameras. ⌧

Stuart Gallagher (@stuartg917)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India