911 (997) Porsche 997 Turbo Facelift - First Drive / Test Drive thread (carmag, autocar…)


The Porsche 997 is the sixth generation of the Porsche 911 sports car manufactured and sold by the German automobile manufacturer Porsche. It was sold between 2004 (for the 2005 model year) and 2013.
http://www.auto123.com/en/porsche/911-turbo/2011/review?carid=1115200101&artid=127199

Video
http://www.auto123.com/en/porsche/911-turbo/2011/videos?carid=1115200101&videoid=6693

Alright, Porsche-- that's enough.

My mother is a lovely woman who is many things to many people—but car savvy isn’t one of them. As a weekly practice, her favourite son sends a picture message of whichever car he’s reviewing to her cell phone.

Clues...
Last week, said picture message contained an image of one baby-blue 2011 Porsche 911 Turbo S. To many, the 911’s classic shape defines perhaps the most instantly-recognizable performance car range on the road. To mom, it could have been the new Corolla-- but a few visual clues prompted her interesting reply.

“NICE SHADE OF BLUE. LOOKS LIKE TROUBLE, BE CAREFUL! XOXO --MOM”

“Looks like trouble”, indeed. Car enthusiast or not, giant yellow brake callipers, a wide and low stance and no fewer than 6 air ducts chiselled into the vehicle’s body are all universal signs of ‘fast’.

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Fast as hell
And forget what you know about ‘fast’. Plant your right foot in the Porsche 911 Turbo S from a dig, and this German-engineered cruise missile leaps forward on a surge of power that pins those on board effortlessly into their seats. Thanks to AWD and about 4 feet of combined contact patch, there’s no traction-related drama, either. It’s like God booted the car in its backside with a soccer-kick from the heavens.

Then, a whiff later, the twin, variable-geometry turbochargers kick in-- and all heck breaks loose. “Explosive” is likely the best non-expletive to begin describing the acceleration.

Zero to 100 km/h is dispensed with in well under 3 seconds-- meaning there’s virtually nothing faster with four wheels with a warranty on this side of a million dollars. At full throttle, you don’t breathe in the 911 Turbo S, since the air is being squeezed out of your lungs.

Opened up, the Turbo S puts drivers into ‘hang the heck on’ territory. Passengers drop their jaws and repeated F-Bombs in the process. It’s absolutely wild.

A twin-turbo symphony of sorts
The twin turbochargers rob the engine of a truly exotic exhaust note, instead leaving a dull hum and the sound of hissing air in the vehicle’s wake. From inside, a melody of wheezing and whining from the turbochargers and gearbox overlap one another—since the engine itself is actually fairly quiet. It literally sounds like a jet taking off—and there’s a muffled array of ‘popping’ noises at throttle lift-off as the exhaust cracks and burbles.

Extreme hardware and software
The rocket-booster thrust comes courtesy of a 3.8 litre twin-turbo and direct injected flat six sitting in the rear. Output is rated at 530 horsepower—or some 30 more than the standard Turbo. A 7-speed PDK transmission is included on all models, as is AWD, and all the optional goodies from the standard car. Heck, it’s even got adaptive motor mounts.

Handling and braking back things up, and the Turbo S handles like any high-powered, rear-engine Porsche-- with a sticky rear and a light and lively front that gets vague and loose when powering out of corners at full throttle. On a track, braking, acceleration and grip are all delivered in absolute excess.

Of course, wizardry in chassis electronics maximizes the effectiveness of all systems, putting the brunt of the Turbo S’ incredible talents at the driver’s fingertips from the get-go. There’s no scrubbing, wheelspin, drifting or protesting. Just aim the steering, squeeze the throttle, point the nose, and try not to grin like an 8th grader in sex-ed class.

End of the day, the Turbo S doesn’t just defy the laws of physics, it ties them up, gives them an atomic wedgie, and writes its name on them in permanent Sharpie.

High-impact exclusivity
Equally impressive is the strange things the Turbo S makes people do. Even during my December test-drive, entire rows of motorists at traffic lights rolled down their windows to catch a whiff of the tester’s exhaust note as it pulled away. Drivers of lesser German cars raced through traffic for a closer look. Crowds formed at gas stations and grocery store parking lots, too.

The snowstorm
But when the weather gets nasty, one can forget the fast stuff—as driving the Porsche 911 Turbo S through a few hundred kilometres worth of Northern Ontario’s worst winter weather is a far more laid back and peaceful experience. This is not a snowbank-busting SUV to be sure—but in most situations, the tester felt reasonably well locked down to the snow, even if a perpetual squirming was apparent in the deeper stuff. Blame this on the wide snow tires and light curb weight.

But, importantly, it always goes where its pointed, has a diligent stability control system, and never once got ‘scary’ on your writer after some 600 kilometres in winter driving hell. Even stopped on a snowy hill, the AWD traction and hill-hold function ensure the 911 Turbo S gets moving in quick order when called upon. So, really, you don’t ‘need’ to store this one for wintertime.

Sensible, actually
And not that it really matters, but the Turbo S also gets surprisingly good mileage when driven gently, isn’t terribly rough and uncomfortable, has good visibility and is easy to board and exit. That’s not the case for a number of other supercars available for this sort of money—namely, about two hundred thousand dollars.

In fact, compared to an SLS or an R8, the Turbo S is nearly as sensible as a Honda Accord. End of the day, it’s a road-going rocket-propelled grenade that could be used every day of the year.

Hope you’ve got a good traffic lawyer.

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>>> Detroit To Atlanta In a Porsche 911 Turbo - Automobile Magazine <<<

Hurley Haywood doesn't get out much, really.



I mean, he gets around. He gets around a lot. For instance, in just the three twenty-four-hour races he won at Le Mans, he and his two teammates racked up 8951 miles, an average of 2984 miles each. In his two twelve-hour Sebring wins, he completed 2449 miles with two teammates, each driver averaging 816 miles. His record five firsts at the 24 Hours of Daytona accumulated 12,960 total miles for him and his teammates, for another zillion blisteringly fast miles each. Now add thirty-three additional Daytonas, twenty-six more Sebrings, nine other Le Mans endurance races, and all the rest of the races in his storied forty-year career, and our friend has been around and around and around some more.



But he hasn't been out on the open road since he and I did the 1994 One Lap of America in a Porsche 911 and bonded forever. That was Hurley's first-ever cross-country road trip. It was also his last, and we still talk about it seventeen years later. So he was really overdue for a second roadgoing adventure, one that went somewhere other than into the pits for refueling and service.



Enter deputy editor Joe DeMatio with the cockamamie idea that I should repeat my very first Automobile Magazine road trip, a celebration of the Porsche 911 Turbo's return to America in 1986 after a six-year absence. I drove it from Detroit to Porsche headquarters in Reno, Nevada. The trip with Brit photographer Dougie Firth took five days, mostly due to horrendous weather that sent us to fourteen-below-zero Amarillo, Texas -- as far south as we could go and still reach Nevada. It was so cold that I pulled my nightgown from the suitcase and it was frozen stiff. One morning in Springfield, Missouri, we found the car encased in ice and needed buckets of hot water to get through to the door locks. The other standout memories of that adventure include visiting a cathouse in Nevada and a constant flirtation with driving on fumes.



I immediately thought of my favorite long-distance driver/traveling companion. Hurley was so game that he left his Deep South home for frigid Detroit. This was a week before his emergence from a one-year retirement to race in his thirty-eighth Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona for Brumos Porsche (with whom he won his first two Daytonas and where he's vice president)....



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Porsche

Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, is a German automobile manufacturer specializing in high-performance sports cars, SUVs, and sedans, headquartered in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Owned by Volkswagen AG, it was founded in 1931 by Ferdinand Porsche. In its early days, Porsche was contracted by the German government to create a vehicle for the masses, which later became the Volkswagen Beetle. In the late 1940s, Ferdinand's son Ferry Porsche began building his car, which would result in the Porsche 356.
Official website: Porsche

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