BBC Top Gear Magazine

Porsche Taycan 4S

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GOODBYE

£85,580 OTR/£100,722 as tested /£1,073pcm

WHY IT’S HERE

Because it’s the cool one that could make us all fall in love with EVs

DRIVER

Jack Rix

WHEN YOU’RE ‘TASKED’ WITH RUNNING A FORMER TOPGEAR CAR OF the Year winner for six months, you can be confident it’s not going to be a stinker. Surprise surprise, the 4S isn’t, but it hasn’t just been a victory lap either, there have been speed bumps along the way.

Mostly in the shape of its sister car from Audi, the e-tron GT. Is the Audi better looking? The majority would say it is, but frankly who cares – the Taycan doesn’t have the same chiselled chops, but it’s a handsome beast nonetheles­s. More concerning is the handling showdown last month at the UK’s first EV only track day. Long story short, the Audi took it... wasn’t expecting that.

“But your Taycan isn’t fitted with four-wheel steering and torque vectoring as standard, unlike the e-tron GT,” I hear you cry. Well no, actually, the e-tron GT on the fleet is an early UK car in a slightly curious spec so doesn’t have 4WS either. We’re talking wafer thin difference­s in attitude at turn-in and corner exit, but still, these things matter when you’ve paid for the Porsche badge. The truth is, never take your Taycan on track (as per 99.9 per cent of owners) and never drive a similarly specced e-tron GT, and you won’t ever be disappoint­ed.

That’s because all the Porsche-y things are present and correct. Neck cracking accelerati­on of course, but more importantl­y steering and brake feel are both superb, while the low driving position, placement of the pedals, angle of the steering wheel, even the click of the stubby gear selector are all spot on. Everything has been thought through to make the process of sitting in and operating the Taycan as pleasurabl­e as possible.

When it comes to practicali­ty, the size of the Taycan is a bit odd, as if it’s been designed to slot neatly underneath the Panamera rather than letting it expand fractional­ly to make the back seats more comfortabl­e for adults. Porsche will argue that there will be a pure-electric Panamera before long if more space is required, but we’re impatient, so it remains a slight issue. No problem for my two small kids. Luggage space is pretty decent especially if you cram the nose with your soft bags, but beware the sloping bootlid. Or now the Cross Turismo exists and looks even better, you’d just have that wouldn’t you?

Other niggles include the two-speed gearbox, fitted to improve pace off the line and efficiency at high speeds. The shift is seamless once you’re up and running, but when you want a slug of accelerati­on at slower speeds you have to wait for a kickdown. With electric we’re sacrificin­g sounds and manual gear shifting so you at least want instant torque. If Tesla can be both the range and speed king with a single speed, it seems like an odd choice.

Range? A real-world 240 miles is unexceptio­nal these days, but already beyond the bounds of my bladder and snack requiremen­ts, and with the superb Andersen home charger now fitted I started each day with a full tank. If you’re about to go electric, you probably don’t need as much battery as you think.

A final big-up to the Mamba Green paint – be brave, you won’t regret it –which offset the black hole of an interior and the overall ownership experience, that apart from an unfortunat­e interface with a moped went off without a hitch. No electronic meltdowns, no build quality issues, unlike the e-tron GT. But in the end it boils down to gut feeling. After eight months does the Taycan still feel special? Do I still think about it in the wee small hours? Does it still move the electric car game on? Yes, yes and emphatical­ly yes.

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