The Northern Advocate

SILENT ATTACK

The Porsche Taycan Turbo EV might make you rethink what a ‘real’ sports car can be . . .

- DavidDa LI LINKLATER

OIt’s a Porsche first, electric vehicle second.

ne day, when the market for zero-emissions vehicles is mature, we’ll evaluate Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) solely on their qualities, without fixating on the fact they’re powered by electricit­y.

There’s a long way to go before that happens. But that’s why I’d argue the Porsche Taycan is a landmark model — because it’s going to help us get there faster.

Taycan is not the first performanc­e BEV. It’s not even the fastest (although it is shockingly quick).

But it is the first properly sporting BEV, with dynamic character that will please the enthusiast. It’s a Porsche first, electric vehicle second.

Y ou don’t need plug-in power first on your priority list to want one, although you will still need a big chequebook: the Turbo featured here costs $289,900, a relative bargain next to the Turbo S at $366,900.

Yes, that’s crazy expensive. And yes, you can buy BEVs that are just as fast for a fraction of that price.

But if that’s your takeaway, I’d argue you’ve missed the point.

The Taycan is essentiall­y a fourdoor BEV alternativ­e to a 911, which costs $269,200 in Carrera 4 S form. If you’re stuck on the fourdoor thing, a Panamera GTS is $274,300.

So Porsches are expensive and Taycan is part of the family in every possible way. T

here’s no point in comparing the Taycan Turbo with (say) a Tesla Model 3 Performanc­e just because they’re both electric. You don’t compare a 911 to a Toyota Supra just because they both have petrol engines.

Let’s also dispense with the performanc­e thing right now, because it’s not that hard to make a BEV really fast. The claimed 0-100km/h figure for the Taycan Turbo is 3.2 seconds. DRIVEN recorded three seconds flat. So it’s fast enough to smack your head against the seatback and enrage your partner and it will do that all day until it goes flat. Enough said.

The genius of the Taycan is in its dynamic character, which is a really hard thing to achieve with a 2.3-tonne BEV. The steering is as tactile and precise as you demand of a Porsche, the chassis immensely grippy thanks to the amount of rubber on the road — but not at the expense of adjustabil­ity over undulating Kiwi roads.

The rear motor is nearly twice as powerful as the front and there’s a two-speed gearbox at the back. It not only helps with that brutal accelerati­on off the line, it can also flick down a ratio under braking. You can talk to this car with the steering wheel and accelerato­r, and it will talk back.

The Taycan feels exactly like a Porsche. The high-voltage architectu­re means much faster response times for the 4D Chassis Control, Porsche Dynamic Chassis Control (PDCC) and Porsche Torque Vectoring Plus (PTV) than a combustion- engined car. It all feels very organic.

Even the brakes have a natural feel, despite being the work of more technologi­cal trickery. Because 90 per cent of the time when you’re pressing the brake pedal, the powertrain is using 100 per cent regenerati­on (not the actual braking hardware) to slow you down. That’s amazing.

The design and quality of the cabin is stunning, all digital and beautifull­y tactile touch screens, but not without its flaws. The glossy surfaces are a fingerprin­t nightmare and you cannot see the tiny gear selector or start button from the driver’s seat.

Despite the four doors, Taycan is still more a 2+2. But that’s okay, because it’s primarily a sports car. Rear passengers do get a “foot garage”: there’s a cutout in the underfloor batteries to make extra foot room.

The biggest challenge with Taycan for the true Porschephi­le is probably the soundtrack — or lack of it.

The notion that a car’s character is entirely tied up with how it sounds is something we enthusiast­s may have to rethink as we move forward. After all, a Porsche flat-six petrol engine sounds epic.

For Taycan, Porsche offers the Electric Sport Sound option ($980): it amplifies the sound of the electric motor into the cabin at the touch of a button. It’s still a real noise, although it sounds pretty Jetsons when you’re really pressing on.

I tried it for a few kilometres and then switched it off, because I like the juxtaposit­ion of silence with sensationa­l dynamic performanc­e.

However, I was in the minority at the DRIVEN office, where others came back giggling like schoolchil­dren about the sci-fi noises. So there’s something for everyone.

I’ve been lucky enough to drive many Porsches on road and track over the years, including many from the current line-up. I love the Taycan Turbo as much as any, maybe more.

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