Robb Report Singapore

Porsche’s New Buzz

The German marque’s new electric car, the Taycan, shows what it’s made of on test drives in Denmark and Germany.

- www.porsche.com

Porsche enters the sustainabi­lity market with the promising release of the all-electric Taycan that has everyone talking.

Porsche Taycan buyers want repeatable, blistering and uncompromi­sing performanc­e.

TESLA OWNERS BELIEVE electrific­ation is the future and the transporta­tion industry shouldn’t drain natural resources. Porsche Taycan buyers? That’s not what drives them. They want repeatable, blistering and uncompromi­sing performanc­e. It just so happens that the Taycan is electric. We tested two Taycan models, the Turbo and the Turbo S, to see if the marque’s battery-powered salvos hit their intended targets.

Slip into the Taycan Turbo and you feel like you’re seated in a 911. This is on purpose, of course, but what’s nothing like the 911 is the technology. The curved driver’s display adds a subtle futuristic touch to the cabin, as do the two centralise­d touchscree­ns. In a surprising simplifica­tion, we cycle through the drivetrain options – Range, Normal, Sport, Sport Plus and Individual, found in the Sport Chrono Package – by rotating a dial on the steering wheel.

Sport and Sport Plus afford the full shot of 849Nm of torque, but the accompanyi­ng lurch gets a mite tiresome in a busy city like Copenhagen. The jerkiness evaporates in Range and Normal modes, which prove the best options for stop-and-go traffic or low-speed cruising, although they offer a startling amount of power. On the back roads, we pop back into Sport Plus to feel the Taycan hunker down as the adaptive air suspension stiffens up. The torque curve is linear and the Turbo will continue to accelerate at an alarming rate for as long as you’ve got asphalt. We hit Launch Control and get a gut punch on the tear to 100km/hr in 3.0 seconds, eventually hitting 200km/hr in

10.6 seconds.

Chuck the Taycan into a turn and you’ll feel the 2,328kg sedan’s largesse, but its nimbleness belies the heft. It cuts far better than it has a right to, affording solid feedback from the wheel the whole time. It’ll dance through tighter exchanges with more ease if you’ve chosen the rear-axle steering option, a feature that comes standard on the Turbo S.

The chassis contains two synchronou­s electric motors, one mounted on each axle, that are fed by a 93.4kWh lithium-ion battery pack. While the Taycan features an all-wheel-drive configurat­ion, power can be biased toward either axle depending on the drive mode. A two-speed transmissi­on adjoined to the larger rear motor is a pure bid for maximum accelerati­on.

While the Turbo’s overboost function will get you up to 670hp, the Turbo S ratchets that up to 750hp, complement­ed by 1,049Nm of torque. On Germany’s autobahn, we rip to 100km/hr in under 2.6 seconds and hit the top speed of 259km/hr in no time at all.

We hammer the Turbo and the Turbo S for more than 480km each day. They require about a 25-minute charge to go from under 10 per cent to 80 per cent thanks to the 800-volt technology and a 270kW charger. The reported range tops out at around 449km.

Porsche set out to build an exemplary performanc­e car on an electric platform, instead of an electric car that has impressive performanc­e. If the Taycan is the jump-off point for Porsche’s foray into electrific­ation, we’re eager to see how far the marque can push it.

Porsche set out to build an exemplary performanc­e car on an electric platform, instead of an electric car

that has impressive performanc­e.

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 ??  ?? The Taycan Turbo S hits 100km/hr in 2.8 seconds, compared to the Turbo’s 3.2 seconds.
The Taycan Turbo S hits 100km/hr in 2.8 seconds, compared to the Turbo’s 3.2 seconds.
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