Porsche - page 288

Macan EV: The Cheapest Electric Porsche On Sale Today - image 192690

Macan EV: The Cheapest Electric Porsche On Sale Today

Find out how the entry-level rear-wheel drive all-electric Macan fares when it comes to driving range and standard features

Porsche’s Macan, the brand’s popular compact SUV, underwent a major transformation in 2024. We’re not talking about a simple nip and tuck here; this is a whole new animal, ditching the internal combustion engine for a fully electric powertrain (you can still get the old Macan ICE versions before 2026). Porsche initially rolled out the all-wheel-drive Macan 4 and the range-topping Macan Turbo EVs, but the carmaker quickly realized it needed to expand the lineup to cater to a wider range of buyers.

2018 Porsche 911 GT3 (991.2) - image 98659

2018 Porsche 911 GT3 (991.2)

After skipping the 2017 model year, Porsche reintroduced the 911 GT3 in 2018 with a new 4.0-liter naturally aspirated boxer-6 mill, putting out 500 horsepower and a 9000 rpm redline, with a manual making a comeback available as a no-cost option.

Porsche’s 911 GT3 has long been the choice for driving purists seeking the ultimate road-legal track car. After being absent for the 2017 model year, it reappeared for 2018 with some crucial upgrades to improve its already-compelling racing pedigree. Gone was the 3.8-liter engine! A 4.0-liter naturally aspirated derived from the GT3 Cup racer motivated it with 500 ponies of might, capable of revving up to 9,000 rpm. A seven-speed PDK was standard, but a six-speed manual made a comeback for purists.

Iconic And Irreplaceable: The Last Air-Cooled 911 Ever Built Hits The Auction Block - image 192677

Iconic And Irreplaceable: The Last Air-Cooled 911 Ever Built Hits The Auction Block

Dubbed 'The Last Waltz', find out why this Type-993 is a collector's dream and of immense historical significance to the Porsche brand

Bonhams is set to auction a very special 993-generation 911 Turbo at Goodwood Revival Collectors’ Motor Cars And Automobilia. Officially named ’The Last Waltz’, it is the last air-cooled Porsche to be built and released from Zuffenhausen. An important milestone in the brand’s history, the Last Waltz was built at the factory on March 27, 1998. It’s too bad that I was only eight years old and completely oblivious to history unfolding. It was commissioned via the Sonderwunsh program for German Author Clauss Vanderborg. Jerry Seinfeld’s famed 993 Carrera 4S Cabriolet was finished and delivered on 31st March, shortly after the Last Waltz came off the line. However, the latter spent six months with the special wish wing of the brand getting specially kitted out with a bunch of aesthetic and mechanical modifications.

Here's How Friedrich Performance Squeezes Extra Performance From The Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT - image 192627

Here's How Friedrich Performance Squeezes Extra Performance From The Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT

The German tuner offers a kit that turns the already potent Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT into a 1,000 horsepower 911 slayer

When it comes to reimagining and modifying Porsche cars, there is no shortage of great names that specialize in the art of making the German company’s performance models even more capable than they already are. Such treatment is not limited only to the Porsche 911 and 718 models though. The German company, Friedrich Performance Manufaktur (FPM) offers performance-enhancing treatment for all Porsche models, and one of its latest kits is dedicated to making the Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT faster than the latest, most powerful 911 we have. Of course, the 992.2 update is about to bring even more radical variants of the iconic, rear-engine sports car, but the Friedrich Performance package for the Cayenne GT gives it a 36-percent bump in power with a bit of extra torque. As you may expect, the numbers are impressive, but even more surprising is how little it takes to unleash that extra power from the Porsche SUV.

Fake It Till You Make It: Could Turbonite Become A New-Found Obsession For Porschephiles? - image 192643

Fake It Till You Make It: Could Turbonite Become A New-Found Obsession For Porschephiles?

Beyond the badges, it looks like the Turbonite fever is rea. From Thermos flasks to keychain rings, here's what we found

Look, I’m a sucker for a nice shade of silver, always have been. I’ve owned three cars in varying shades of grays and silver over the past 20 years. There’s a reason why classic fighter jets and sleek yachts all rock some shade of metallic grey. It’s timeless, sophisticated, and lets the car’s lines do the talking. Now to celebrate the Turbo’s five-decade legacy, Porsche is ditching the gold crest for their Turbo lineup with a new "Turbonite" accent color? Sign me up. We saw it first on the Panamera Turbo last year, a subtle hint on the trim. But at Monterey, with the introduction of 50th Anniversary 911 Turbo S? Now that’s a match. The shade is clean, a departure from the usual chromey silver. They even got New York-based Pantone Color Institute involved to come up with this shade, which is some serious exclusivity cred.

Family-Feud: How Lamborghini Urus SE Stacks Up Against The Porsche Cayenne Turbo E-Hybrid - image 192242

Family-Feud: How Lamborghini Urus SE Stacks Up Against The Porsche Cayenne Turbo E-Hybrid

While both pack a similar hybrid powertrain underneath the skin, find out what makes these sports SUVs from within the VW Group, truly distinct

Lamborghini is on a roll, electrifying its lineup one model at a time. The Italian automaker kicked things off with the Revuelto, their first-ever plug-in hybrid supercar with a whopping 1,001 horsepower. Then came the Urus SE, a hybrid SUV that’s more than just a green machine - it’s a performance powerhouse. And let’s not forget the Temerario, the Huracan’s electrifying successor, boasting a brand-new V8 hybrid setup that churns out 907 horsepower.

How A Tesla

How A Tesla "Engine" Swap Saved This Classic Porsche 911 Race Car

This classic, air-cooled 911 wasn't supposed to get a Tesla powertrain, but fate had other plans for it

Unfortunate circumstances are just as likely to hit cars as they are people and I recently stumbled upon one such build on the web and this one is bound to raise a few eyebrows, among the classic Porsche 911 community. Air-cooled Porsches are one of those things that are considered art. Altering any aspect of them is the automotive equivalent of blasphemy. Unless, of course, you are Singer, Tuthill, or one of the other names, dealing in reimagined 911s. Essentially, what you are looking at is a Frankenstein of a car. It started as a 1976 model that was turned into a race car, and eventually, thanks to a landslide, it required a powertrain transplant. Chris Ashton from Ruffian Cars is the man behind the crazy Porsche 911 race car, and what he had to say about this build and how it um... evolved, was quite the story. More importantly, the Tesla powertrain is not where the madness of this classic 911 build ends. This also raises the question - is it better to let something die or save it through unconventional methods?

Dreaming Up A Pre-Panamera Sport Turismo With The Least Loved 911 - image 192465

Dreaming Up A Pre-Panamera Sport Turismo With The Least Loved 911

While this Porsche Wagon rendering is not doing the 996 any favors, we try to make a case for a sporty Porsche wagon in the early 2000s

We live in a world of A.I. and gone are the days where you need to be a design guru to come up with something truly unique. However, depending on the LLM (Large Language Model) and your ability to write the right prompts, you can come up with something either truly spectacular or absolutely bizarre and hilarious. I’ll admit that I haven’t been at the game long enough myself, but I’ve taken A.I. assistance to dream up everything from a compact all-electric 911 and it was just about acceptable at best. At the other end of the spectrum, you have folks who have gone about coming up with a GT3-inspired pram. More recently, I stumbled upon a Type-996 wagon that I found on Instagram, which I feel is not too bad. So let’s talk about it.

A Sign Of The Times: Is The Porsche 911 GT3 Market Poised To Dip?
- image 192379

A Sign Of The Times: Is The Porsche 911 GT3 Market Poised To Dip?

Whether you're a prospective buyer or a current GT3 owner, this recent analysis reveals that it all comes down to the generation, with one of them being an outlier

Regardless of the generation, beyond the 911 Turbo models, the GT range is the next natural step. These track-bred cars have continued to evolve since the late 90s and early 2000s with the introduction of even more hard-core models with the likes of the GT3 RS and GT2. Given how most of these track-bred cars are limited-run models, they tend to command a premium over your average run-of-the-mill Carreras. I was curious to see how the GT3 market in particular has been faring over the past few years, given the wild ride we had with regard to pricing, through the pandemic, and here’s what I found.

The Story Of Turbonite: A New Identity For Porsche's Future Turbo Range - image 192361

The Story Of Turbonite: A New Identity For Porsche's Future Turbo Range

Porsche is celebrating 50 years of Turbo lineage, with a stealthy signature shade that will feature on all future Turbo models

Porsche has been serving up peak performance and luxury for decades, and their Turbo models have always represented the pinnacle of performance that you can actually use on the road. The first turbocharged 911 dropped in ’74 and blew everyone’s doors off. It became a legend, a symbol of pushing boundaries. Now, Porsche’s taking that same spirit and applying it to the entire Turbo lineup with this sleek, metallic grey they’re calling Turbonite, a color that we first saw on the 2023 Panamera Turbo and subsequently, the Macan EV Turbo.

Overlap Uncovered: Here’s How Much 981 There Is In A Type-991 Porsche 911
- image 192342

Overlap Uncovered: Here’s How Much 981 There Is In A Type-991 Porsche 911

Porsche doesn't want you to know this, but the 911 and Cayman/Boxster may have a lot more in common that you think

Sharing production costs between models is not uncommon in the modern-day automotive industry. It seems even Porsche’s iconic sports cars are no exception and the Porsche 981 and 991 models are a perfect example. The 911 doesn’t need an introduction as it has been Porsche’s flagship sports car since 1964, after succeeding the 356 - Porsche’s first sports car, since the company officially became a brand. That said, Porsche’s financial troubles from the 1990s, prompted the company to give us a budget-friendly model. In came the 986 Boxster, and it immediately became clear it was a cut-price, mid-engine 911, minus the rear seats. This was not the last time Porsche did this. Australian YouTuber and Porsche aficionado, Jeff Richardson took a deep dive into the 981 and 991 Porsche models to examine how much they have in common. He also bought a flooded 981 Boxster solely to dismantle it. One thing became clear to him – the extent of the similarities between the 911 and Boxster/Cayman is a lot more than you initially may have thought, and it doesn’t stop with these two models.

2009 Porsche Boxster (987.2) - image 104373

2009 Porsche Boxster (987.2)

The 987.2 Boxster's performance received a major boost with a 2.9-liter engine and an optional seven-speed PDK transmission. Ventilated seats, an upgraded four-speaker audio system, and a PCM infotainment system with a 6.5-inch touchscreen elevated infotainment.

Porsche’s 987 generation of the Boxster arrived for the 2005 model as a successor to the highly criticized 986 generation. Four years after the 987’s launch in 2005, Stuttgart introduced the 987.2 generation in 2009. For its new generation, the roadster gained a new 2.9-liter engine with a horsepower rating of 255 and a seven-speed PDK (dual-clutch) automatic transmission.