Business Day - Motor News

Tradition meets state-of-the-art in Porsche 911

INTERNATIO­NAL LAUNCH/ The new Carrera S blends comfort and sporty driving with more finesse than ever before, writes Denis Droppa

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Reinventin­g a Porsche 911 must be one of the trickiest balancing acts in the automotive world, as the car must embrace progress and move with the times, but without straying too far from the iconic template as it risks alienating its numerous fans.

Or, as August Achleitner, vice-president of the 911 and 718 product lines, says: “Tradition must meet state-of-the-art.”

The latest 911 metaphoric­ally juggles eight balls while walking a tightrope as it cruises into 2019 still the benchmark in its class. The Carrera coupe version available at launch in rear-wheel drive S and all-wheel drive 4S models is better than before at melding the divergent concepts of civilised commuter and pulse-racing sports car.

It is a perfect everyman’s sports car with a wide set of talents, and those talents have been further extended at both ends of the comfort and sports scale.

The eighth generation of this rear-engined icon that originally sprang from the loins of a VW Beetle is almost boring in its ability to be a cultured, smoothridi­ng car in traffic jams, where most driving time is spent. It cruises over unkempt tar with judder-free finesse and leaves the bone-shaking to its edgier GT-badged brothers.

LONG AND WINDING ROAD

But show it an open road, preferably a winding one, and it comes alive in all kinds of adrenaline-surging ways. The twin-turbo boxer six-cylinder engine remains a 3l but is muscled up to 331kW power and 530Nm torque, up from 309kW and 500Nm.

Performanc­e is strong, punchy and instant, virtually lagfree at sea level where I drove it at the internatio­nal launch in Valencia, Spain.

The engine and eight-speed PDK auto gearbox, which has gained an extra gear and has faster shifts, are Simon and Garfunkel in their harmonious collaborat­ion, delivering a mechanical duet so finessed that one can scarcely think of them as two separate items.

The PDK is the quickest form of Porsche, with the auto Carrera S able to hit 100km/h in 3.7 seconds (the 4S is a tenth quicker), but there will be a manual version arriving in six months for clutch-loving purists who feel more fulfilled by using additional limbs. German autobahns will allow the Carrera S to stretch its legs to 308km/h and the 4S to 306.

The Carrera S is no wailing GT3 sound-wise, but the turbo engine makes a valiant attempt at sonic charm and revs to a respectabl­e 7,500rpm.

New technology includes a Wet Mode that makes the car almost foolproof to drive in the rain. The new tech detects a moist surface and adjusts the stability control to suit, and deploys the electrical rear wing for more downforce. My attempts to spin the Carrera S on a wet handling track proved fruitless no matter how roughly I shook it by the collar.

Aside from this, the new 911 has the requisite warning and brake-assist and lane-assist systems, with adaptive cruise control and, for the first time, night-vision assist with a thermal imaging camera.

The 911’s iconic coupe shape remains as recognisab­le as a Coke bottle or the Eiffel Tower, but it has been fine-tuned with features such as flush door handles, wider wheel housings arching over the 20-inch front wheels and 21-inch rears, and a new light bar connecting the tail lights. The rear wheel arches are now flared to give even the basic Carrera S muscular haunches like its more powerful brethren.

Inside, the dash has been redesigned to have the more horizontal emphasis of bygone 911s. The central analogue rev counter upholds long-held Porsche tradition in the otherwise digitised cabin, while the obligatory touchscree­n interface is thankfully complement­ed by physical buttons to quickacces­s some functions.

It is in direction changes that the new 911 really finds its groove. The steering is 11% more direct, the front and rear tracks are wider, and the PASM damper control has been tweaked, resulting in the new 911 lapping the Nurburgrin­g five seconds faster than its predecesso­r. The optional Porsche dynamic chassis control antiroll system and rear-wheel steering are available to enhance handling stability.

It is the traction that lingers most in the memory from my Spanish test drives, and on racetrack and mountain passes the Carrera S was as clingy as reunited sweetheart­s.

It’s a beautifull­y balanced car, particular­ly on a roller coaster of a mountain road, the suspension yielding on the bumps and dips but without allowing body roll or understeer to spoil the cornerhugg­ing party. Swift and satisfying, it is a machine that seems to smooth out a rough driver’s mistakes, sweeping through curves with a polished grace.

It is the complete sports car as expected.

Underpinni­ng it all is Porsche’s typical granite-like solidity, which has been made even more torsionall­y rigid.

The new 911 will arrive in SA around mid-year priced at R1,708,000 for the Carrera S and R1,797,000 for the 4S. The cabriolet version will follow soon after.

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 ??  ?? Top: The 911 is a beautifull­y balanced car, particular­ly on a roller coaster of a mountain road, the suspension yielding on the bumps and dips but without allowing body roll or understeer to spoil the corner-hugging party. Above: New Wet Mode makes the handling almost foolproof in the rain. Above left: The newly designed dashboard has the more horizontal emphasis of earlier 911s.
Top: The 911 is a beautifull­y balanced car, particular­ly on a roller coaster of a mountain road, the suspension yielding on the bumps and dips but without allowing body roll or understeer to spoil the corner-hugging party. Above: New Wet Mode makes the handling almost foolproof in the rain. Above left: The newly designed dashboard has the more horizontal emphasis of earlier 911s.
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