911 Porsche World

964 HITS 30

Arguably one of the big milestones in 911 developmen­t, it’s 30 years since the 964 first debuted – we celebrate with three chips off a familiar block

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The first of the modern 911s? We celebrate 30-years of the 964 with Carrera 2, Turbo and road race RS

50 years is a long time in automotive developmen­t but if you parked a line of 911s from 1963 901 through to current 991 most people could trace the path of evolution. But even if you think you know your Porsches the more dramatic moments in that history are sometimes less obvious than the visual ones, the fact casual observers could mistake the 964 for little more than a lightly modernised G-series a case in point.

Yet, along with the switch from air to water cooling, the 964 is one of the decisive moments in 911 history and the 30th anniversar­y of its first appearance well worth celebratin­g. Technicall­y and in mindset the 964 is the first modern 911, Porsche realising there were many more profitable ways to skin the same cat and laying the groundwork for the bewilderin­gly broad line up we see today with its Carrera 2s, Carrera 4s, Targas, narrowbodi­es, widebodies, Turbos, RS versions and various limited edition specials.

To keep things manageable we’ve picked examples of the core Carrera, Turbo and RS models on which to pin this celebratio­n. To use a navigation­al analogy there’s a scenic route through the 964 story with all sorts of interestin­g diversions, cul-de-sacs and paths less travelled. For now we’ll be sticking to the trunk roads.

The fact you’re reading this magazine probably means you have a better appreciati­on than most of what the 964 stands for. But it’s worth reflecting that for the 21 years leading up to the 964’s launch the 911 had remained fundamenta­lly the same. While it gained in wheelbase, power, wings and other adornments for those two decades the fundamenta­l developmen­t philosophy was one of if it ain’t broke don’t fix it. Eventually Porsche realised there was a desperate need to modernise the car without scaring off the fans for whom the fundamenta­l look and layout were sacred. These seemingly opposing influences can be found throughout the 911’s history and, in the 964, the conservati­ve visual changes hid

much more radical ones under the skin.

The commonly quoted statistic is that the 964 was 85 per cent new compared with the G-series it replaced. A forensic parts audit would prove that decisively either way but would be a deeply tedious exercise so instead let’s look at the more obvious developmen­ts. These include the introducti­on of a four-wheel drive option, the first proper automatic gearbox on a 911, power steering, ABS and something resembling a fully-functionin­g heating and ventilatio­n system. It might have looked oldschool. But the 964 was a dramatic example of the 911 getting with the times.

Originally inspired by the desire to include a four-wheel drive option the 964 was, literally, new from the floorpan up. This was to accommodat­e the propshaft and other hardware while the suspension was substantia­lly modernised with coil springs all round and aluminium lower trailing arms at the rear. Powertrain-wise the G50 gearbox was carried over but the 3.6-litre engine was all-new and featured twin-plug ignition and more sophistica­ted electronic control. Those still undecided about whether a 911 looked better with or without a wing had their prayers answered by a deployable one that maintained the clean, traditiona­l silhouette at rest but emerged above 50mph for a steadying influence at higher speeds. A manual override meant those equating aero with manhood could park up with the wing extended if a visible demonstrat­ion of virility was required.

OK, as a Porsche fan you probably knew all this already. But it’s worth digesting and provides an excuse to gather these three cars together and appreciate the 964 where it really counts – from the driver’s seat.

Let’s start with the Carrera, this of course being the foundation on which any 911 range is built. Keen to promote its new technology, the 964 actually launched in

The commonly quoted statistic is that the 964 was 85 per cent new

1989 as the four-wheel drive Carrera 4, the rear-driven Carrera 2 only following in the 1990 model year. Ideally we’d have a 4 here to start the story but clean, original Carreras are few and far between and this beautiful Tiptronic coupe has interest of its own.

With just over 32,000 miles on the clock it feels remarkably fresh too, its paintwork gleaming and interior impressive­ly unmarked. Of course, anyone buying a 964 these days needs to do so with eyes open to the fact bodywork can make the difference between a dream come true and an expensive nightmare. But fundamenta­lly the car hails from an era when Porsches were properly over-engineered, obvious in the little tactile details like the slop-free action of the door catches, the thickness of the leather and the unpretenti­ous but solidly screwed together interior fittings.

This car’s pre-airbag four-spoke steering wheel is delightful­ly slim-rimmed, hinting at a delicacy in the driving experience to come. Although the five-dial dash layout is in keeping with Porsche tradition the driving position is more convention­al, with less of the skewed, legs to the centre of the car contortion demanded by older 911s.

Although appreciabl­y more comfortabl­e and modern there’s little to freak out those coming from a G-series, the clear intention being to calm any nerves that the 964’s mechanical changes were going to dilute the character. So the power-assisted steering still has weight to it. And the view out of the upright windscreen is pure 911, likewise the compact on-road footprint and confidence this inspires in the driver.

The Tiptronic on this car is an important example of how Porsche wanted the 964 to speak to a wider audience. While 911s had sold well in America and other markets where automatic gearboxes are traditiona­lly popular, the failure of Sportomati­c to capture the imaginatio­n left the 911 without an automatic option for a decade.

These days we’re used to instantane­ous

shifts from fast-reacting PDK gearboxes equally capable of shifting themselves or manually by paddle or stick. Tiptronic was an example of Porsche attempting to put a sporting twist on the convention­al automatic gearbox but shows how far transmissi­on technology has come on.

In its day the option to operate as a convention­al automatic or offer the driver manual overrides in a separate plus and minus shift plane was about as involving as self-shifters got. There’s no escaping it blunts the reactions of the 250ps/246bhp 3.6 though, torque converters and highrevvin­g, naturally-aspirated motors never an especially happy pairing.

Which isn’t to damn the experience completely. Because a 964 Carrera of any type is a lovely thing to drive. There’s flow and compliance to the suspension that enhances the good things about the 911’s fundamenta­l layout, while smoothing some of the rougher edges. One advantage of the Tiptronic is the ease with which you can use your left foot to trail the brakes into the corners, settling the front end and giving a more decisive turn-in while overlappin­g your throttle input to make the most of that trademark corner exit traction. The manual mode offers a degree more control, upshifting promptly with a tap of the stick but a little slower on the way down through the gears, the larger gaps between the four ratios making it harder to find stabilisin­g engine braking on corner approach. But it’s a satisfying machine in its own right, the Carrera’s unadorned simplicity and relative daintiness compared with modern cars translatin­g to the driving experience as well as the looks.

The Turbo is a very different experience, not least for its mechanical link to the

Manual mode offers a degree more control, upshifting promptly

described as a brisk cruise. As with all oldschool Turbos though there’s a whole different character once it spools up, the high-pitched whistle from behind you accompanie­d by an assertive rush of accelerati­on that always feels like the car is getting just a little carried away with itself. It’s very different from the snappy responses of a modern turbocharg­ed 911, that sense of the boost remaining even when you come off the throttle meaning you often arrive at corners carrying just a little more speed than you anticipate­d.

Strong brakes mean this is rarely a problem, but where in the Carrera you tend to keep a fairly steady speed through the corners the Turbo is a more a process driven experience of bursts of accelerati­on between them. You don’t pitch the Turbo into the turns on its nose, you take your time to settle it, carry your speed through and then hope you’ve timed your accelerati­on correctly to get that rush of boost on exit and up the next straight.

320ps/316bhp isn’t a huge amount of power by modern standards but a drive in a Turbo is always rewarding and exciting, albeit one that makes very different “demands of you compared with the Carrera. A grand tourer with just a hint of menace, it’s different enough to feel like a separate car in its own right, not simply a variant within a model range.

And so to the RS. Where its ’70s predecesso­rs wore stickers and ducktails and modern equivalent­s bristle with NACA ducts, wing vents and race car scale aero appendages, the 964 presents a very different propositio­n. Parked next to the Carrera its lower stance, the camber of the rear wheels and the way the tyres seemingly scrape the arches are all giveaways, likewise the cage visible through the rear screen. But other than that the RS looks pretty much like a standard narrow-bodied Carrera, perhaps one of the reasons it was so misunderst­ood and undervalue­d early in its life. Seems

It’s very different from the snappy, modern turbocharg­ed 911

laughable given what they go for now but there was a time people just thought it was a harsh, noisy and uncomforta­ble Carrera without a significan­t enough on-paper performanc­e advantage to make the compromise­s worth living with.

As a left-hand drive car this one doesn’t have the power steering fitted to UK market versions, window winders and a blanking plate where the stereo would normally be proving its credential­s as a ‘proper’ RS and not the optimistic­ally described ‘touring’ version that offered such indulgence­s as electric windows and air con. This side of the fully stripped N/GT this is the purist RS and an absolute high water mark for factory-built drivers’ 911s.

Against the opulence of the Turbo the interior of the RS is a lesson in neatly finished minimalism, the fixed racing buckets still leather trimmed and the interior ostensibly complete. But stripped back to the absolute basics, the smaller RS wheel, flat door cards with looped fabric releases and mirror full of roll cage leaving you in no doubt of this car’s priorities.

Engaging first gear and releasing the clutch for the first time is enough to confirm that impression, there being absolutely zero slack in any of the RS’S controls. At parking speeds the steering wheel requires a proper heave and there’s effort required to get it on the move. But the instantane­ous throttle response is simply magical, the lightweigh­t flywheel meaning there’s very little inertia in the engine and nothing to impede its reactions to the pedal.

Don’t go looking for the RS’S talents on the spec sheet. To appreciate why this car has, finally, earned its place among the great 911s you need to drive it and understand how sound, sensation and interactio­n matter far, far more than numbers on a page. There are no flat spots in the engine and it picks up from low revs

The instantane­ous throttle response is simply magical

with little hesitation. But the further round the rev counter the needle goes the better it gets and it’s clear it’s happier in the upper reaches of the range where its impatient lowrev clatter opens out into a glorious howl.

The ride is stiff and the wheel hungrily sniffs out camber and surface changes, writhing in your hands and never entirely settled. You could hoover up the miles all day long in the Carrera and do the same with more speed in the Turbo. The RS demands a lot more physical and mental effort to drive at any pace but what you put in you get out. It’s so immersive not once do you wish for a stereo or anything else that might distract or dilute the experience of driving it as hard as you dare. And the more you apply yourself the better it gets, pedal placement and hairtrigge­r throttle response that noisily scold ham fisted attempts at rev matching smoothing out and inspiring a well-rehearsed choreograp­hy of inputs from hands and feet.

Like any 911 driving it properly is best when you’re proactive, reading the road, setting the car up for what’s coming and making your steering and throttle inputs decisive and timed to perfection. Things will get ugly if you try and drive it like a modern car, arriving at corners with no plan and expecting the car to flatter you despite your lack of foresight. Anyone can go quickly in a modern RS Porsche. But to go truly fast takes real talent and applicatio­n and here the 964 RS demonstrat­es a common bond with all Porsches to wear this esteemed badge. And quite what diversity there is within a range of cars many would consider represents the perfect intersecti­on between the classic 911 experience and the modern 911 experience.

There are 911s to suit all tastes. The one Porsche launched 30 years ago is in with a shout of being a definitive one though. PW

Things will get ugly if you try and drive it like a modern car

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They don’t come much more original than this 964 C2, in grey and still sporting its ‘flag’ style mirrors
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Interior is solidly put together and the leather generous and thick. And yes it’s a Tiptronic, but that’s significan­t because it was Porsche’s first modern 911 automatic option
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