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  • 2018 Audi Q8 First Drive: Video

    The Audi Q8 is Ingolstadt’s X6/GLE Coupe rival is a big five-seat luxury SUV that only the Germans seem to get right.

    In a year where we’ll soon see the humungous BMW X7, the Q8 takes a different route. It’s shorter than the car it’s based on – the Q7 – but wider and centred on moving four or five people in style.

    Audi Q8 Interior

    Audi Q8 Interior
    New dual-screen layout
    Audi Q8 Interior
    Eight-speed ZF shifter
    Audi Q8 Interior
    10.1-inch MMI screen
    Audi Q8 Interior
    12.3-inch Virtual Cockpit
    Audi Q8 Interior
    Banging B&O system
    Audi Q8 Interior
    Rear climate control (optional)
    Audi Q8 Interior
    Audi Q8 Interior
    Audi Q8 Interior

    What’s also neat is the interior. Like the new black glass dominated A7, the Q8 is even more impressive. Build quality is tighter than the lips of an arrested bikie and easily feels better than its distant relative, the Bentley Bentayga.

    The giant 2.9m wheelbase means space galore for front and rear seats – I reckon this car is going to be used all over the world as a limo.

    On the move it’s super quiet – you can barely hear the engine at all and it’s not until you’re at three figure speeds that you will hear the wing mirrors. A bit.

    Q8 Exterior Design

    2019 Audi Q8

    It doesn’t look anything like its size in the pictures, which is pretty neat. Audi’s top-end LED Matrix lighting is standard here and like the A7 and A8, animates on startup and shutdown. This is a nice piece of theatre.

    The big new grille has what Audi calls a mask – that’s the big Bane-like thing around the edge of the grille that will grace more Q-cars as time goes by.

    I like the little ur Quattro references like the full-width rear light bar, spoiler and the shape of the side glass.

    But it has fake exhausts!

    People seem to hate the fake exhaust pipes. I’m not entirely sure what the fuss is about. Tons of cars have fake exhausts and I find it extremely difficult to get worked up about them, but if it matters to you, yes, they’re fake.

    Audi Q8 55 TFSI

    Chassis

    Obviously, it’s a Quattro drivetrain. That’s the easy bit. The 55 TFSI uses ZF’s awesome and always brilliant eight-speed automatic to send the power out and about the four corners of the car.

    The centre diff manages the power with a standard ratio of 40:60 front to rear, with up to 85 percent going to the rear tyres and 70 to the front. Hopefully not mid-corner… (obviously not, before you get upset)

    Front and rear suspension are both five-link with adaptive damping in the traditional selectable settings. You can also specify air suspension, which is fitted to the orange car you see in the pictures.

    That car also has the optional 22-inch wheels, instead of the 21s as standard.

    It’s a chunky lad at over 2200kg. Audi says that the shell is a bit heavier because of the frameless windows. Like its A7 and A5 siblings, the coupe-like (or actual coupe) configuration means that frameless windows work better and feel sportier. But that means a lot more steel in the roof to keep you safe in a rollover and ensure general structural integrity.

    Engine and Drivetrain

    Audi Q8 Interior

    Well, let’s start at the top. The 55 TFSI has a 3.0-litre petrol V6 under the big bonnet, spinning up 250kW (340PS) and 500Nm. Peak power arrives at 5500rpm and maximum torque spread from 2900-5300rpm.

    The engine’s two twin-scroll turbos are crammed into the 90-degree vee. This means the turbo pressure comes up really quickly. Being so close to the exhaust header means less pressure loss so less lag.

    Like its distant A7 cousin, the Q8 rolls with a 48-volt mild-hybrid system. The engine has a belt alternator system, harvesting energy and sending it to a small lithium-ion battery under the boot floor.

    The engine can cut out at 22km/h as you coast to a stop, turn off at moderate to high cruising speeds for periods of time and deploy a bit of extra torque when the planets align. All the while it keeps your climate-control and various other systems running such that many drivers and passengers won’t notice.

    It works really nicely in the A7 and by contrast to the SQ7 where it’s there to spin up the electric turbo, it is all about fuel-saving. Which is just as well – despite all the weight-saving aluminium, this bad boy weighs over 2200kg.

    Driving

    Audi Q8 55 TFSI
    Audi Q8 55 TFSI
    Audi Q8 55 TFSI
    Audi Q8 55 TFSI

    I don’t know about you, but this car had me scratching my head.

    I mean, what’s the point? Why is it so big only to carry five people? Why is it so heavy? Why does it look so much like an ur Quattro? Wait, that’s not a complaint.

    Climbing in, it feels big. The new cockpit layout is genuinely brilliant getting comfortable is super-easy. The seats up here in the 55 TFSI are really nice, very comfortable both for the driver and passenger.

    That extra width over the Q7 is enough make it look really muscular on the outside and properly big inside – it spans a lane and on some of the narrow B-roads I swept through, feels like you need to swerve to avoid oncoming traffic. You don’t obviously, but you need to keep your wits about you.

    The cars I drove either had the full-fat all-wheel steering and air suspension package or the standard steel springs with adaptive damping and no rear-wheel steering.

    From a ride and handling perspective, there’s not a great deal of difference between the two. Normal driving reveals a very accomplished chassis with a really nice balance for such a big car.

    But with the all-wheel steer, something clicks into place and the Q8 becomes a hell of a lot more agile. Low-speed manoeuvres are obviously much easier as the turning circle tightens with the rear wheels going in the opposite direction.

    At speed, though, is what we’re really interested in here. The front wheels instead turn in the same direction and make all the difference. Coupled with the air suspension, you can really hustle the Q8. The front end is pretty good to start with – massive, grippy tyres will do that – but with a bit of help from the rear end, it feels more like a biggish Q5 rather than a slightly shorter Q7, if that makes sense.

    As always, the 3.0-litre V6 is brilliant. Moving this kind of weight is no easy feat, but it does it virtually silently. It’s almost like those fake exhausts are trying to tell you something – you can’t hear 3.0-litre. You genuinely have to check it’s on. Clearly, Audi is saving the noise for Audi Sport customers willing to wait for the RSQ8.

    But boy is it strong. The petrol unit gets the Q8 to 100km/h (62mph) in under six seconds. The strong mid-range means country-road overtaking requires only a little planning.

    So is it for me?

    It doesn’t make a huge amount of sense until you’re in it. I approache it quite warily but once I’d spent time behind the wheel and more time climbing around it, it started making sense.

    Do you need a car this big? Hugely unlikely unless you’re a family of basketballers. It’s an alternative to both a big wagon (like, er, the A6 Avant) and the seven-seat utility like…um…the Q7. So basically, it’s an SUV version of the A8.

    I didn’t think I’d be okay with that. But it turns out, I am.

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    Peter travelled to the New South Wales Snowy Mountains region as a guest of Audi Australia. Flights, accommodation and gingerbread men were all supplied as part of the trip.

  • The McLaren 720S Spider Is Here

    McLaren’s 720S Spider has arrived as sure as convertible follows mid-life crisis. We’ve got the new machine  (un)covered.

    McLaren 720S Spider
    Look, ma, no roof!

    This was always going to happen but we’re pleased it’s here all the same. I am on record as not being a huge fan of convertibles, but the McLaren Monocage II set me straight in the 570S.

    Here in the 720S you get a motorised hardtop that folds itself neatly away under the rear deck in double-quick time. Apart from that, everything is exactly the same.

    Well, obviously it isn’t. That would be stupid.

    Sun, sun, sun
    Rear buttresses are glazed
    Roof off.
    Roof on.

    From the windscreen back, things had to change.

    The rear buttresses that frame the rear glass are themselves glass to help maintain some of the coupe’s incredible visibility. The rear deack is all new and the bodywork from the doors back reshaped to look just right with the roof folded away.

    Technical stuff

    The active aero knows whether the roof is on or off and acts accordingly. Top speed is the 341km/h (212mph) with the roof on and 325km/h (202mph) with the roof off.

    The sprint to 100km/h (62mph) is fractionally slower at 2.9 seconds. 0-200km/h (0-124mph) arrives in – ahem – 7.9 seconds while the standing quarter blazes by in 10.4 seconds.

    Engine power is, obviously, identical at 537kW (720PS) and 770Nm from the 4.0-litre twin-turbo.

    You can choose a solid roof or a carbon-framed glass lid with electrochromatic glass. That means you can press a button and the glass goes dark. I’m here to tell you, that’s useful – in warmer climates you will cook with a glass roof.

    The hydraulic active suspension remains to deliver unbelievable ride and handling while the steering is fuel-hungry hydraulic but still brilliant.

    Yes but how much does it weigh?

    Just 49kg more. McLaren says the Monocage II-S means the engineers haven’t had to add any strength to the chassis, so that 49kg is mostly roof mechanism and a possibly the bodywork changes.

    Stronger belts and a carbon fibre structure behind the passenger cell helps stop unplanned head-road interfacing. The 650S Spider used steel, so the 720S’ system is almost 7kg lighter.

    All up dry Woking says it’s 1,332kg dry, claiming 88 fewer kilos than its nearest (unnamed) competitor.

    The interior looks fundamentally identical, and that’s fair enough. No real need to change apart from adding something sensible like Apple CarPlay, which won’t fit in the current central screen layout.

    How much does it cost?

    So far we’ve only got UK pricing, which is a not-inconsiderable £237,000 with deliveries starting in March 2019.

  • 2019 Porsche 911 (992) Unveiled

    Like so many fast cars, it feels like ages since we first heard that this car was coming. And now it’s here.

    Porsche is starting with the S models, saying that they sell better. The new car looks terrific. If you just think it looks the same as the old car, you are partially wrong and you can skip to the next bit about the engines.

    As with the 991, the car is bigger in every direction. A new front crash structure is responsible for most of the 20mm increase in length while the new body is 45mm wider, including some lovely subtle flaring of the front wheel arches. There is now just the one body style, and they’re all the fat-bottomed kind.

    The wheels start at 20-inches up front and 21s at the back. Despite the extra length partially offset by a height increase of 2mm, it looks low and fast.

    I love it. And I’m not a 911-phile. I just think it looks really clean and mean.

    At the rear, the new integrated wing looks the business and rises in two stages so you don’t look too stupid when getting about at moderate speeds. The high-level brake light looks part of the grille until it lights up and the new Porsche signature of full-width taillights is magnificent.

    Another nice detail? The flush-fitting doorhandles that pop out when you approach. Snazzy.

    Inside looks wider as Porsche takes a more horizontal approach to design. It’s all-new, of course, and looks better, less bitty than the old cabin. While you can see just one cupholder in the image behind the dinky little shifter, there’s another over pop-out jobbie in the dash against the door. In case that’s important.

    Engine and Drivetrain

    For the S, the 3.0-litre twin turbo remains but now with more power and torque. Plenty of detail changes, too.

    Power is up by 22kW (30PS) to 331kW (450PS). 0-100km/h differs between the rear-wheel drive (3.7 seconds) and the 4S (3.6 seconds). That’s 0.4 seconds off the previous marks set by the 991.

    If you want to knock another 0.2 seconds off, go for the Sport Chrono Package.

    Top speed is 308km/h for the RWD and 306km/h for the 4S.

    The new eight-speed PDK twin-clutch transmission is partially responsible for the 55kg weight gain. It’s always going to be a heavy thing when you add another gear to an already complex unit. It’s also interesting that Porsche has stuck with the PDK and not gone with the ZF eight-speed. Not chucking rocks, of course – it’s just an observation.

    That new gearbox is meant to handle future hybrid powertrains, so keep an eye out for that in the coming months.

    When?

    The 992 Carrera S and 4S will start deliveries in the New Year and is on sale now. Most dealers have probably been taking deliveries for months because, you know dealers.

    Australian buyers can expect to pay no less than $265,100 for the S and $281,000 for the 4S. UK buyers will be paying in the region of £93,110 and £98,418 respectively.

  • Know Your 911: Part 7 – the 991

    Longer, wider, lighter, faster. The 991 911 has been with us for seven years but certainly made its mark.

    The 991 launched in 2011, with the usual “how can you tell it’s new” jokes to go with it. Porschephiles don’t care about that stuff and neither do I. They’re not going to change the look and rightly so.

    The 991 grew again, both in overall length and in its wheelbase, again to fit bigger humans and more stuff. The wheelbase grew a whopping 10cm making it look longer and lower, aided by a lovely wide track.

    I think the kids call this “stance.”

    It might have been bigger in every direction, but it got lighter to the tune of 45kg (or thereabouts, depending on the model). The wild GT2 RS smashed the ‘Ring and the post-GFC world couldn’t get enough of them – over 217,000 sold, taking the all-time sales through the one million mark.

    During the year after its initial launch in 2011 at the Geneva Motor Show, the Cabriolet joined the coupe and in 2014 came the return of the GTS.

    The Turbo and Turbo S pairing launched in 2013, as did the first iteration of the GT3. The GT3 RS replaced it two years later before the mid-life refresh in 2016 threw the cards in the air again.

    From 2016, the Carrera and GTS switched to all twin-turbo 3.0-litre power. Shortly afterwards came the new Targa and in 2018 the limited-run Speedster.

    Huffy puffy engines

    The base engine shrunk again, this time to 3.4-litres but still managing 257 kW (350 PS). The 3.8-litre S upped the ante with 294 kW (400 PS).

    The GTS arrived in 2014, this time with 316kW (430PS) and the option of rear- or all-wheel drive.

    In 2016 the 3.0-litre twin-turbo found its way into the 911’s rump, with 272kW (370 PS) and a nice fat torque band. The GTS went further on the same engine with 331kW (450 PS).

    The Turbo climbed to 397kW (540 PS) from its 3.8-litre twin huffer and the S scored 427kW (580 PS).

    And Porsche kept going. The Turbo S Exclusive Series had 446kW (607PS) and finally, the GT2 RS had a whopping 515kW (700PS). If you were happy to restrict yourself to the track, the very limited 935 had the same engine. All of them had whopping great slabs of torque to ruin the rear tyres.

    The GT3 kept the sublime naturally-aspirated 4.0-litre from the previous generation, initially with the option of a six-speed manual. With 382kW (520PS), that same engine with 368kW (500PS) found its way into the Speedster, the final edition of the 991.

    The manual on the GT3 disappeared in 2017 and you could also get a slightly less hardcore GT3 Touring.

    Well. That’s been fun. With Part 7 we draw to a close the countdown to the new 911 to be unveiled at the LA Auto Show.

  • Know Your 911: Part 6 – the 997

    Six generations in and the 911 range got bigger and deeper. With variants galore to suit all tastes, from a sweet entry-level Carrera 2 to fire-breathing GT2 RS.

    Porsche 911 GTS 997
    997 Carrera GTS

    The 997 arrived in a blaze. In 2004, Porsche was riding pretty high, backed by its ever-closer relationship with the Volkswagen Group. The aggro over the move away from water-cooling had long since been silenced and Porsche’s designers produced a cleaner, prettier car than the 996.

    A new approach to both ends of the car – while maintaining the instantly recognisable profile – created a much less blobby and more resolved look. The car rew again by 44mm, which is a fair bit on a car that size and the rear end came in a whopping 88mm wider.

    Most notable was the exit of the smashed crab headlights, replaced with oval units set at a steeper angle so the car didn’t look like it was a limbo champion in the making all the time.

    Over the 997’s lifetime, you could choose from 24 different variants on the theme, with a 2008 facelift to the engines thrown into the mix. As the market demanded more, Porsche offered more and made money like it was going out of fashion.

    Which it did with the Global Financial Crisis that could have killed the sports car maker had the Cayenne SUV not been there printing cash.

    Flat-sixes everywhere

    The evergreen threat of the 911 dropping to four-cylinders reared its head but didn’t eventuate. Out of the blocks, you could have a 911 with a 240kW (325PS)/370Nm 3.6-litre. For the S, the engineers bored the cylinders out a bit for 3.8-litres, producing 265kW (360PS) and 400Nm.

    The 3.8 also had the X51 power kit option, which boosted grunt to 280kW (381PS) and 405Nm.

    The Turbo dropped back to 3.6-litres and ripped out 305kW (415PS) and 620Nm. An overboost function slung you an extra 60Nm on full throttle for a short time for a whopping 680Nm. The Turbo was the first production car engine to feature variable vane geometry.

    The Phase 2 came in 2008, bringing more power and more general equipment like bi-xenon headlights.

    The dry-sumped 3.6 went up to 254 kW (345 PS) while the 3.8 in the S rose to 283 kW (385 PS). The Turbo came a little later but it was worth the wait, with the now-3.8-litre twin-turbo knocking out a nice round 500 PS or 368kW. A Turbo S would arrive late in the 997 cycle, with 390kW (530 PS) and 700Nm.

    The Turbo S also introduced everyone to the idea of a seven-speed PDK (Porsche Doppelkupplung) twin-clutch, replacing the five-speed auto from 2009.

    Versions, versions everywhere

    You could have a Carrera, Cabriolet, Targa (2006 onwards) or Speedster (2011) and you could have “basic”, S or Turbo in most of them. You could also have Carrera 2, Carrera S, Carrera 4 and Carrera 4S. The Turbo was, of course, all-wheel drive.

    In early 2011, the GTS arrived to plug the small gap in the range, with a wider body and rear-wheel drive. The 3.6-litre served up 304 kW (413PS). The Carrera 4 GTS went on sale a few months later.

    The GT3 and GT3 returned as well. The GT3’s engine was turned up 305kW (415PS) while the GT2’s turbo unit made 390kW 530PS. The Phase II versions ripped out 320 kW (435PS) and the GT2 RS 456 kW (620 PS).

    The guts. Look away if you’re squeamish.

    Phase II also saw the introduction of the GT3 RS 331 kW (450 PS) and the GT2 RS had a whopping  456kW (620 PS).

    Then there was the nutcase GT3 RS 4.0. That thing spun up 368 kW (500PS) at a spectacular 8500rpm from the naturally-aspirated 4.0-litre engine. Along with that wild engine and bits of racing cars in the engine and aero, the RS 4.0 weighed 1370kg. It was damn fast and the last hurrah for the 997. A fully-laden Turbo was nearly 200kg heavier.

  • Know Your 911: Part 5 – the 996

    Porsche’s fifth 911, the 996, re-wrote big chunks of the rule book. Longer, wider and with fried egg headlights, it also had – gasp – a watercooled flat-six. Did the 996…dilute the brand? (I am not sorry)

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    996 Porsche 911

    The 996 was a bit of a mixed bag. The company was on a bit of an efficiency drive, both in a financial and engineering sense. The former forced the same nose as the entry-level Boxster on to the 911 while the latter meant the end of air-cooling for the flat six. That’s where the money went.

    The financial pressures seemed to mean that the 911 grew for just the second time in 34 years. Wheelbase and overall length increased for more space. As humans got bigger and buyers got wealthier, they demanded more room in the classic sports car. And you need more room for luxury kit.

    Porsche took the brave pills with this car’s big engineering changes even if it didn’t show on the outside. The 996’s front end upset quite a few people who weren’t Boxster owners and later in the model’s life, the front end tweaks distanced the 911 from its little sister.

    Being brutally honest, the styling hasn’t aged well on the early and base cars. The most mystifying thing to me about this car is its popularity – if I had a dollar for every person who said they were thinking about buying a 996, I could buy a 996. And the time machine to go to back and buy one new.

    Water-cooling the 911

    996 911 engine

    The greatest source of controversy was the end of the air-cooled flat-six. I’m still stunned it lasted as long as it did, especially in the Turbo. Thermal dynamics caught up with the 911 and air-cooling just wasn’t an option anymore.

    The old air-cooled engine was noisy and rough by contemporary standards. Reliability might have been good, but 911 buyers expected more. Stringent emissions regulations – particularly in the US market – meant the variations in power outputs were becoming more and more unacceptable to premium buyers.

    The new power unit started the bidding at 3.4-litres and 221 kW (300 PS).

    Power rose in 2001 to 224 kW (305 PS) which was also the final year of the narrowbody Carrera 4. Finally, the 3.4 became a 3.6 and the 996 finished with the 235kW (320PS) and for the 40th Anniversary 40 Jahre edition, a whopping 254kW (345PS).

    996 Turbo and Turbo S

    2004 911 Turbo
    2004 911 Turbo 996 with the less Boxster-ey front end.

    In 2000 the Turbo joined the Carrera and Cabriolet. With 3.6-litres and two turbos, owners could play with 313 kW (426 PS) and streak too 100km/h (62mph) in 4.2 seconds.

    From 2002 you could order the X50 option with a remapped ECU, bigger turbos for 336 kW (457 PS). The 996 Turbo became the first roadgoing 911 to blow past 300km/h.

    That engine was standard in the end-of-model 2005 Turbo S, along with carbon composite brakes.

    GT2 and GT3

    Porsche really got to work on its GT variants with the 996. Thankfully the front and rear styling changes massively improved the wobbly blobbiness.

    The GT3 was based on the widebody Carrera 4 and featured a naturally-aspirated 3.6-litre engine which was good for 268 kW (364 PS). It was the Turbo’s engine without the, er, turbos. Both the GT2 and GT3 used a dry sump system and an aluminium crankcase and the cylinders were Nikasil lined to make them extra slippy.

    Porsche’s engineers stripped the car of nice, soft things like the back seat, added adjustable suspension, bigger brakes and some wild-looking aero. And a roll cage, if you please.

    The second iteration of the GT3 had 283kW (385PS) and was actually available to deprived American buyers. With all-wheel drive, it cracked 1.03g on the skidpan.

    Turbo fans were offered the GT2. Like the GT3, all the nice things were tossed out. The rear-wheel drive GT2 had an even more aggressive aero package to help keep 355kW (483PS)/640Nm flat-six from sending you into orbit.

    The extra power came from bigger turbos, engine management tweaks and new intake and exhaust systems. A proper riot, then, setting the scene for every GT2 and GT3 to come.

    Looking for Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4?

  • Know Your 911: Part 4 – the 993

    In the fourth edition of the run-up to the 911’s eighth generation, we have a look at the last of the air-cooled 911s, the 993.

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    993 Porsche 911
    993 Targa

    You know Porsche kept saying things were 80-percent-plus new in the G and 964 and you couldn’t really believe it because they looked so similar. Well this time, you can believe it. A bit. Apparently the only thing that stayed the same was the roof. And even then, if you bought a Targa, the roof style changed.

    When the car first launched in 1994, you could choose between the Carrera and the Cabriolet. The reason for just two bodystyles would later become clear – the Targa’s roof was re-engineered into a glass canopy that slid down under the rear window.

    The Carrera 4S and S introduced the wide-boy turbo rear guards to naturally-aspirated 911s and you could again choose between rear and all-wheel drive.

    The new body feature the new layback headlights, possible through new lens technology known as polyellipsoidal. The design looked pretty fresh, actually and is probably the nicest mix of old and new, with better integrated bumpers, flush glass but that same iconic silhouette.

    Interestingly, the 911 became the Formula One Safety Car after it was discovered that perhaps a clapped-out Alfa 75 wasn’t quite up to the job.

    Air-cooled flat-six for the win

    The last of the air-cooled flat-sixes sat behind the rear seats. The 3.6-litre M64/05(06) (great name) chuff-chuffed 200 kW (272PS) at launch. The snappy titles continued a year later when Porsche added VarioRam technology to make the M64/21(22). Power rose to 210kW (285PS) and top speed to 270km/h. Later you could option a 221kW (300PS) unit.

    A six-speed manual was standard and Tiptronic made a return though still with just four forward speeds.

    The 911 Turbo shipped with twin KKK turbochargers (not that kind of KKK) known as K16s. Power rose to a wild 300 kW (408PS), then 316kW (430PS) and finally 331kW (450PS) in the GT2.

    Chassis

    993 Porsche 911

    Underneath was an aluminum chassis and the rear suspension was an all-alloy multi-link arrangement. The latter came from the 989 project which has always fascinated me.

    The 959’s three-differentialled all-wheel drive system was replaced with a simpler system. The centre diff went and was replaced with a viscous coupling, knocking off some of the previous system’s weight.

    Bigger brakes, improved power steering and a new exhaust system completed the picture.

    The 993 sold almost 65,000 units in its four years on sale to 1998.

    Looking for Part 1, Part 2 or Part 3?

  • Know Your 911: Part 3 – the 964

    The third 911 is known by the fans as the 964. At the time, Porsche said that 85% of the car was new despite having the same shell as the G Series with integrated plastic bumpers.

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    964 911 Carrera 2/4

    The 964 arrived under a cloud. In 1989 Porsche was in a fair bit of economic trouble (foreshadowing the near-flameout two decades later) and the 964 had to perform on the dealer floor.

    Yeah, it did pretty well. Nearly 100,000 over the five years it was on sale from 1989 to 1994.

    The flat-six remained, of course, now at 3.6-litres and producing 184kW (250PS), driving all four wheels. The Carrera 4 lead the launch of the car, before rear-wheel drive returned in 1990 Carrera 2. The 3.6-litre also featured twin-spark ignition, a result of the company’s work with aircraft engines.

    911 Turbo 964
    Whale tail. You don’t get much more early-90s than that.

    There was indeed a lot of new stuff. A retractable rear wing eliminated (scary) rear aero lift, you could specify an automatic transmission with Tiptronic and power steering was standard. And twin airbags followed in the Carrera 2, a few years after their introduction in the 924.

    964 911 Turbo – 3.3 to 3.6

    911 Carrera 4 964
    Still clean: Porsche said the 964 was 85% new.

    The 911 Turbo returned with the old car’s  235 kW (320PS) 3.3-litre before moving to the 3.6-litre base engine from the other 964s in 1994. The latter spun up a handy 265 kW (360 PS). These are rare given the fourth-generation 993 was just around the corner.

    In 1992 you could buy the 964 in RS guise again and American buyers could get RS Americas, of which just 71 were built.

    911 Speedster

    “Turbo look”
    Speedster. In Retina Ruining Red.
    This is a good-looking Speedster. The 964 is not.

    Amusingly, you could buy a 911 Speedster from 1993. This featured a chopped windscreen, double bubble behind the seats and a modified roof. Based on the Carerra 2 Cabriolet, Porsche built 930 Speedsters and a further 15 with the fat-bottomed turbo bodywork.

    I don’t know about you, but I think they look horrific.

    Thankfully the 993 was a little more tasteful. Mostly.

    Looking for Part 1, Part 2, Part 4 and Part 5?

  • Know Your 911: Part 2 – the G-Series

    Porsche’s second-generation of the decade-old 911 was really just a big facelift. Known as the G model, its growing popularity in the US and the big changes in the global market meant big changes for Porsche’s 2+2.

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    1982 Porsche 911 Carrera S Coupe

    The G-Series was half-rationalisation – you could only get the 2.7-litre flat-six from the start – and half regulatory. The US had brought in rules that fundamentally ruined the looks of a lot of cars, most famously the MGB. Most American cars were already too ugly to ruin with rubber bumpers.

    The new shell featured front and rear bumpers that could deal with 8kmh impacts. The deformable structure behind it meant the bumper could shift up to 50mm before important things started breaking.

    The cabin featured three-point seatbelts and integrated headrests to help stop whiplash in rear-enders. In a frontal collision, the new steering wheels featured impact-absorbing materials that were slightly kinder to your face.

    Bosch K-Jetronic fuel injection made an appearance in two of the three models, including the S, with power ranging from 110kW (150PS) to 129kW (175PS).

    From 1976 the 2.7-litre became 3.0-litres, with an attendant boost in power to 121kW (165PS) for the standard 911.

    Outside of the US, the MFI-engined 2.7 had 150kW (210PS).

    The G-Series also saw the introduction of Porsche’s famous whale-tail rear wing. Germany’s TUV road authority wasn’t best pleased with the duck tail wing, so the replacement made up for that in Porsche’s home market.

    The forgettable 912E also arrived in 1976 for the US market. Powered by a VW four-cylinder (the same as the 1969 engine) from the 914, it only lasted until the 924 arrived on the scene in 1977.

    Hello 911 Turbo

    The first turbo 911 was the 3.0-litre from 1974. Initially developing 191kW (260PS), the 3.3-litre intercooled machine raised that to 221kW (300PS).

    The latter could sprint from 0-100km/h (0-62mph) in a then-astonishing 5.2 seconds. I remind you, it did all this on 1970s tyre technology.

    The Eighties

    1974 Porsche 911 Carrera

    Porsche seemed a little distracted around the end of the 1970s. The 911 had been the company’s mainstay, but changes were coming. The 924, 944 and 928 were all supposed to replace the old timer, but it never happened. Buyers stuck with the 911, preferring it to the V8-powered 928 the company expected them to move to.

    The G Series kept on keeping on, with a Cabriolet, Targa and a growing reputation in racing.

    In 1978 the standard engine was a 3.0-litre flat-six with 130kW (177PS), the “new” model crowned the 911 SC or Super Carrera. Engine power rose again to 140kW (191PS) and then in 1981 to 150kW (204PS).

    Porsche changed from magnesium to aluminium for the engine and even teased the idea of all-wheel drive for the 1981 Cabriolet concept at the Frankfurt Show, but it didn’t make production.

    Carrera 3.2

    From 1984, the Carrera name returned with an increase in power to 154kW (210PS) for the US market and 172 kW (234 PS) for the rest of civilisation. The 3.2-litre was supposedly 80% new, with tons of changes to the guts for more power and reliability.

    The 911 also scored revised underguts like brakes and suspension.

    In 1986 a new Bosch system increased power for American-delivered cars, which was cause for some celebration.

    The G Series bowed out in 1989 after 15 years in production and in the 25th year of 911 production.

    Up next is the 964  in Part 3 of Know Your 911.

    Looking for Part 2, Part 4 and Part 5?

  • Know Your 911: Part 1 – the 911

    We’re counting down the 911s as launch day for the eighth-generation moves closer. Here we start with the original 911, released fifty-five years ago.

    1965 Porsche 911

    Porsche intended the 356 successor to be called 901 but pesky old Peugeot got in the way. After some no doubt tense discussions – things are rather rosier between the two countries today – Porsche settled on 911.

    A hit in the US, the car quickly took hold. Porsche introduced a drop top and in response to US concerns about that style of car’s safety record, the Targa arrived. Billed by Porsche as the safety cabriolet, the Targa’s 20cm wide rollover hoop made it hard to argue the point.

    With a rear-mounted engine slung out behind the rear axle, this is proof that Germans have a rich sense of humour.

    While those first cars launched with a monstrous 96kW (130PS), the 1966 S brought 118kW (160PS) to the table along with the debut of the Fuchs forged alloy wheel.

    1965 Porsche 911

    If all that power was a bit much, an 81kW (110PS) T might have been more to your liking. Californians in the grip of these new-fangled emissions laws could choose the 911 E (E for injection).

    The first cars were absolutely tiny, which meant all that power could get the little machine along at a very decent clip. But, customers being what they are, expected a 2+2 to actually carry +2.

    Bigger, calmer, faster.

    In 1968 Porsche lengthened the wheelbase by a whopping 57mm to increase interior space. Happily, the change reduced the rear end’s propensity to pass the front-end, a small but important change.

    Changes and new models continued apace. In 1969 the air-cooled flat-six went from 1991cc to 2195cc. In 1974 the engine got bigger again, out to 2.4-litres. Power outputs ranged from 96kW (130PS) to 140kW (190PS) and the 911 could now run on standard unleaded.

    911 Carrera RS 2.7

    1973Porsche 911 Carrera RS 2.7

    In 1973 a second icon was born – the 911 Carrera RS 2.7. The last hurrah for the first-generation, 1525 went out into the wild. As the name suggests, the engine grew again for more power, 154kW (210PS) and a top speed of 245km/h. On 1973 tyres. If you’ll excuse me, I have to throw up.

    Styling changes included that super-subtle duck tail wing, red wheels and even more subtle Carrera graphic. The car weighed just 1000kg and went like stink for the day.

    These days a Carrera RS in excellent shape will cost you well north of US$1.1m.  A concours 911 from the day is easily worth US$1m.

    The G came next.

    Looking for Part 3, Part 4 and Part 5?