Bath Chronicle

PACE And SPACE

Estate is a

- COLIN Goodwin

THIS is the first car we’ve tested in some time that draws an audience each time we stop.

The Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo is, in theory, the estate version of the Taycan saloon but in practice it’s rather more than that. The clue is in the word Cross and some subtle body additions.

In its standard form the Cross Turismo has a ride height that’s 20mm higher than the saloon’s and if you go for the optional off-road pack that rises to 30mm.

All Taycan Cross Turismos are four-wheel drive and share the same powertrain­s with the saloon which means an electric motor at the back with a two speed automatic gearbox, and one motor at the front with a single-speed transmissi­on.

All versions come with the larger 93.kwh battery but I wouldn’t be surprised if Porsche in the future didn’t offer one with a single electric motor and the option of a smaller battery as it does with the saloon.

The range starts at £79,340 with the Taycan 4 Cross Turismo and then goes through a 4S, Turbo and Turbo S at £139,910.

We’re testing the straight Turbo which costs £116,950. That’s a lot of money and if you think that you could live without 616bhp and wouldn’t die of shame if your friends discovered that your car could only do 0-62mph in 5.1sec instead of this car’s 3.3sec, then I’d save a whole lot of money and buy the entry-level 4 Cross instead.

Almost without exception I prefer the estate body of a car over the saloon – and never more so than in the case of the ugly Porsche Panamera. With the Taycan I’m sat on the fence as the saloon looks great in itself. What might sway it is the extra practicali­ty of the Cross Turismo. I’m not bothered about the raised ride height or the Gravel Mode which bumps it up by 30mm while selecting different throttle, suspension, traction control and torque-vectoring settings to suit mud and slippery conditions. Not in my £116k motor, thanks.

More useful is the 1,212 litres of luggage space that you get when you fold the rear seats flat and the 446 litres with them in place. There’s also 84 litres of storage under the bonnet but the saloon has that anyway. Also very welcome is an extra 45mm of headroom in the back of the car which, if you order the panoramic sunroof, goes up to 47mm. For families the Cross Turismo might be the logical choice.

Porsche is clearly aiming this at that great motoring cliché, the family with an active lifestyle, because it offers an optional roof box that’s rated for use up to 124mph but will significan­tly reduce the car’s usual maximum range of 281 miles.

Unlike the saloon, the Cross Turismo can be ordered with a tow bar but it’s only for a bike rack rather than a caravan.

Inside, the Cross Turismo is very much like the Taycan saloon which means a very plush interior, lots of gadgets and not very many switches.

Although the ride height has been increased you still sit quite low in the car. Air suspension is standard and the comfort that comes with it is impressive despite the massive wheels.

Naturally, you have a selection of driving modes but the only one that makes sense is Normal, since Sport Plus spoils the ride. And, of course, like the Taycan Turbo saloon, the Turbo Cross Turismo is ridiculous­ly fast.

In typical EV fashion its overtaking power is instant and neck snapping. An overboost facility gives you a monster 670bhp for a brief period.

The word is that Porsche is also going to launch a Sport Turismo version of the Taycan which won’t have the extra ride height or the plastic cladding around the wheelarche­s.

That might be the version to go for. But if you can’t wait, then this is a fabulous car which for now has no direct rival.

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