Business Day - Motor News

Keeper of the Porsche grail looks to future

INTERVIEW/ August Achleitner, director of the Porsche 911 model line, gives his view on the next generation

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There’s an oft-repeated anecdote from 1990: the setting is a technical seminar in Berlin for engineers in the automotive industry. During a break, two participan­ts are talking about the 911. One of them, a leading engineer for a major car maker from southern Germany, says: “If I had to improve that car, I wouldn’t have the foggiest idea. I think it would be incredibly difficult.” The other, a leading engineer at Porsche, regards his counterpar­t with incredulit­y, and says nothing.

It still elicits a chuckle from August Achleitner today when he thinks of his befuddleme­nt back then in Berlin. Further developing the 911 has been his job for almost 20 years. Achleitner is the director of the 911 model line and is thus something like the keeper of the Porsche grail.

“The heart of the company,” he calls the 911. If one were to strip down everything that bears a Porsche logo, that exemplifie­s and drives the company, to reveal the core of the brand, it would look like a 911. With its unmistakab­le flyline — the typical roof line — the 911’s styledefin­ing basic form retains its freshness and trailblazi­ng spirit even today.

The company says the next 911, generation 992, will carry on that tradition. “We know where we’re from and where we want to go,” says Achleitner. “The decisive factor is that the 911 generates a driving feeling that no other car can impart.”

NATURE OF THINGS

According to Porsche, that is not meant in an arrogant way, it’s really just the nature of things: the specific seat position, the flat-six engine in the rear, its sound, the amount of space, the feedback from the brakes, steering and pedal system together with the suspension, the dynamic but always easily controllab­le burst of power and the one-of-a-kind design that ties it all together, making this car the epitome of what it has meant to be a sports car — for 55 years.

The riveting question is how the 911 needs to develop in the future to continue to define the brand as the gravitatio­nal core of Porsche. Automotive industry megatrends, including digitalisa­tion, electrific­ation and connectivi­ty, will play a role, as well as the question of how these trends should be evaluated.

“With each innovation, the decisive factor for me is whether it suits the character of the 911,” explains Achleitner. “We don’t necessaril­y have to be the first in this regard with the 911. What’s crucial, rather, is that every innovation be offered in a typical Porsche manifestat­ion.”

Here, it’s the designers, above all, who are called on to work their magic, according to the 911 chief. The 996, for example, was the first to feature a navigation system. When Achleitner looks at this model today, he says he still finds it beautiful and elegant, although he has to admit that some elements strike him as a bit outdated now.

It’s important, he feels, to design digital interfaces between people and machines that are as timeless as possible. “Anything but contrived” Achleitner’s creed.

He’s convinced: “Even where the public might be expecting a bigger ‘wow factor’, in the long run a certain aesthetic reserve pays dividends.”

The visual packaging of new technologi­es is just one aspect. The other aspects involve the capabiliti­es that they enable.

“Even when it comes to the individual assistance systems, they have to fit with the 911,” says Achleitner. After all, no one buys engines came to an end and the age of water-cooled flat-six engines began. It was 2015 when the last naturally aspirated engine in the rear of the Carrera was completely replaced by a turbo engine.

“Some fans rushed the barricades; it was all gloom and doom for many,” recalls Achleitner. “And then the same thing happened as always: nothing.”

The new models have always received more rave reviews than their predecesso­rs.

“That encourages us to think about fundamenta­l innovation­s in the future as well.”

COMPELLING EXPERIENCE

Electric drive technology is a good example. “Two years ago I’d have said no way. Today I wouldn’t categorica­lly rule it out,” concedes the head of the model line. Just to preclude any misunderst­andings: the Porsche 911, Type 992 is not an electric sports car. But it could be an option somewhere down the line, says the company.

“I drove the prototype of our coming electric sports car, the Mission E, and it was a compelling experience. And the performanc­e of the Porsche LMP race cars with hybrid drive systems is simply sensationa­l.”

Achleitner is certain that no car with a combustion engine alone could beat them around the corner. Although he admittedly clings to the flat-six engine, he can now imagine an electric motor in the 911. So there will be a next step in terms of drive technology, if it fits Porsche and the specific character of the 911.

The secret of the Porsche 911 could perhaps be described as follows: it’s the sportiest and most dynamic car in the company’s line-up, but also its bastion of stability. A point of orientatio­n for which Achleitner has found a simple developmen­t principle, which may have something to do with that short talk back in Berlin in 1990. In contrast to his counterpar­t that day, he does have an idea: “The new 911, too, will be the best 911 of all time.”

 ??  ?? August Achleitner, director of the Porsche 911 model line.
August Achleitner, director of the Porsche 911 model line.
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 ??  ?? The developmen­t team look over the camouflage­d new 911, left. Our artist’s impression of the new 911, in this instance an e-hybrid version, right.
The developmen­t team look over the camouflage­d new 911, left. Our artist’s impression of the new 911, in this instance an e-hybrid version, right.

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