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We sit shotgun in Porsche's new Panamera four-door. M Division, AMG and Maserati should be very worried indeed.
When Porsche phones up and asks if you want to go to its Weissach research facility to see the Panamera well in advance of its motorshow debut there's only one answer. Even if it's only for a passenger ride and a technical briefing. As passenger rides go the Panamera certainly delivered, any doubts we might have had that the big four-door would dilute Porsche's core sporting appeal having been seriously quashed. We'll be driving it before it arrives in the UK, though from our brief introduction from both the passenger and rear seats of the Panamera Turbo and Panamera 4S we're certain that it'll make its rivals look a little bit silly.
In the Metal
It's not pretty the Panamera, though in the metal it's not quite the munter we'd anticipated. There are actually some really nice touches. Catch the bonnet from some angles and there's a touch of Ferrari's 599 GTB about its contours (some suggesting the big Fez's nose looks like a Corvette's) and the scalloped flanks could be from Ferrari's now defunct 456GT. Forget those Italian references though, as overall the Panamera is unquestionably a product from Porsche. The lights, the curvature over the wings and the rear hatch all clearly exhibit Porsche's design DNA.
It's perhaps not the most cohesive of Porsche's designs, but like the awkward-looking Cayenne that came before it, in the Panamera Porsche has concentrated on making sure that however it looks it drives like a Porsche should. You can't see it from behind the wheel either, and inside, the Panamera's cabin finally moves Porsche properly into the sphere of luxury driving environments. There are four sumptuously appointed individual seats - the massive transmission tunnel ruling out a fifth pew - and the numerous switches nestling on and around the transmission tunnel look more Jacob Jensen and Bang & Olufsen than anything Porsche has produced before.
What you get for your Money
Porsche has only just announced the pricing for the initial three-car launch line up. The rear-wheel drive Panamera S will start at £72,226; adding a pair of driveshafts to that creates the Panamera 4 S, which will cost £77,296. Add turbocharging and you're not going to see much change from £100,000, the Panamera Turbo's list price being £95,298. Both the four-wheel drive cars come with Porsche's PDK double-clutch automatic, which costs an additional £2,289 in the Panamera S. The entire launch line-up features PASM (Porsche Active Suspension Management) and leather seats, while a Sport button that stiffens the suspension and quickens the PDK's shifts is also standard.
The Turbo gets lots of extra toys thanks to its range-topping status, the rear passengers getting heated seats for instance, while a Bose audio system will entertain all should you ever tire of the glorious noise from the V8. All Panameras also come with a driver training day at Porsche's Driving Experience Centre, Silverstone - as all new Porsches do.
Full Story: The Car Enthusiast - Porsche Panamera passenger preview
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