Porsche 911 Targa (991) – first pictures!

Boy, does the new 991 Targa look good!!!

The new design is much closer to the original Targa from the 70s, as opposed to the glass-roofed 996 and 997 Targa.

Apparently it will be available only with 4WD (Targa4 and Targa4S models) as it is based on the wide body 4WD Carrera cabriolet.

How the Targa roof can fold automatically is hard to understand, but we will know more this afternoon after Porsche’s press conference in Detroit at 17:45 CET.  

Test drive of the Tesla Model S – the true meaning of torque!

After visiting the Tesla store in Zurich earlier this fall, I wrote quite an enthusiastic review based on first impressions of Tesla’s family sedan, the Model S (found here). Finding time for a test drive took longer than expected, but earlier this week it became reality – and boy what a life-changer it was!

Given I described the first impression of the car quite extensively in my first review I’ll pass on the details but what strikes you every time you step into the Model S is how spacious it is. The absence of an engine in the front has left space for quite a sizeable, second luggage compartment of 150 litres, easily fitting two larger bags, which together with the hatchback solution in the rear means around 900(!) litres of luggage space with five seats (and over 1600 litres if you fold the back seats). This means the Tesla is a true family car option, as long as your children are not oversized (the limited headroom on the back seats means people over 180 cms will hit the roof).

Tesla-Model-S-white-right-front-1-1024x640

With the Tesla salesman (a converted banker, mind you…) next to me, I took possession of a pearl white Model S with black interior, to me the best colour combination. It had the stronger of the two offered engines (85 KwH, 414 bhp, range around 400 kms) with the so called performance package, meaning a better handling chassis and a torque of 600 Nm, rather than 440 Nm in the standard 85 KwH version. It also featured the panoramic roof that opens larger than the sun roof of any other current production car.

Driving a Tesla in the city is quite undramatic. Obviously there is no engine noise but to be fair, I don’t hear the engine in my MB either, and the Tesla is still exposed to surrounding noise. Fascinating at first, but easy to get used to, is the strong engine breaking sensation developing as you take your foot off the pedal. This is the engine regenerating electrical power and once you learn to manage it (which takes roughly 5 minutes), it means you can actually drive the car without breaking in 9 cases out of 10. It also means that driving down an alpine road for example, when regeneration will be particularly high, your range will develop positively. What also strikes you immediately is obviously the 17 inch info screen that occupies the center of the car and from which basically everything is handled. This system always has an internet connection, over Wifi or 3G, financed by Tesla all through Europe. That’s right, no roaming charges if you take the car on a trip abroad!

Tesla-Model-S-Performance-interior-seat

With this in mind, the remaining driving experience in the city is completely undramatic. The car handles well, together with the suspension clearly on the sporty side, quite reminiscent of a 5-series BMW. Seats are comfortable (although they could do with some more lateral support) and the cabin, lacking a transmission tunnel, is very roomy.

And then at some point you come onto the motorway, and this is when all you thought you knew of motoring (or indeed electrical cars!) changes – forever. The nature of an electrical car means that torque is constant irrespective of the speed, and power delivery is instant, as there is no transmission, turbo or other to delay it. So when you floor it at 60, 80 or 100 km/h, you immediately have 600 Nm of torque hitting you in the blink of an eye. This means the Tesla does 0-100 km/h in around 4.5 seconds but even more impressive, it does 80-120 km/h in less than three seconds, roughly on par with a Panamera Turbo, but beating an Aston Martin Rapide (that money-wise will both set you back considerably more). The feeling when it does so is quite simply unlike anything you have ever experienced. It is also very, very addictive, and something every motor enthusiast should try out.

On smaller roads the impression of a well-handling, rather sporty car is confirmed. Given the 600 kgs of battery power sit in the floor, the center of gravity is low, and weight repartition at 48/52 is excellent. Sure, it doesn’t behave like a 911, but again this is a large, family sedan. It may feel slightly heavy (after all it weighs 2.1 tonnes…) but there is no roll to talk about, steering is precise and the (air) suspension is well-behaved.

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Not a recommended way of driving considering the range…

No negative points? Sure, there are a few. As mentioned the seats could be more supportive, the fact that a high-tech car like the Tesla lacks modern functions such as a lane assist or an intelligent cruise control is disappointing, and some parts of the interior, especially in the boot, lack premium feel. But when you floor that pedal, you will forgot all of the above very quickly…

Since my first visit at Tesla, the company has cut delivery times to 4-5 months, and the Model S has become the most sold car in Norway, a country with high car taxes but strong subsidies on alternative fuel cars. And looking at the financial side even if you live outside of Norway is quite interesting (at least in Switzerland but surely in other countries as well): buying a properly equipped 85 KwH Model S sets you back around 105.000-120.000 CHF, i.e. roughly the same as a large German sedan with similar equipment (but without an engine that in any way can match the experience). But after that, it’s only good news. Comparing costs to my current MB E350, this is what it looks like: no road tax for electrical cars in Zurich (+700 CHF), service included for the first four years (around +1000 CHF on 20.000 kms/year), cheaper insurance (+700 CHF) and “fuel” costs on 20.000 kms of around 600 CHF rather than around 3700 CHF (+3100 CHF) in my case means a net saving of around 5500 CHF – per year. From that perspective, the price is more than fair. There is also a 4 year warranty on the car and 8 years on the batteries, and a resell level that will probably by far exceed conventional cars.

Tesla is also becoming a serious pain in the butt for larger (German) carmakers. How can a company with no car manufacturing tradition and a couple of thousand employees come up with a car that in some aspects is lightyears ahead of competition? How can they sell it at 100.000 CHF, when a small BMW i3 with some basic equipment but less than half the range (not to talk about the power or the size) costs more than 50.000 CHF? How can Tesla offer an infotainment solution that is constantly online over 3G all over Europe? The Germans had better find an answer to these questions sooner rather than later.

Likewise, it is high time for Europe’s politicians to wake up. This is a car that at zero emissions could seriously change Europe’s automotive landscape, especially if Tesla as promised comes out with a cheaper model in the coming years, Still, in most cases, it is Tesla that needs to finance the power charging stations built over Europe out of their own pocket. Where are the initiatives in this direction from the various types of green parties that like to talk the talk, but rarely walk the walk?

While these questions are answered, go and test drive a Tesla. You won’t regret it…

Porsche 991 GT3 driven by Chris Harris – the most important car of the year!

Chris Harris has driven an engineering sample of the new GT3. How does he get away with this?

Conclusions (spoiler warning):

  • The engine is superb, in spite of the new GT3 dropping the Mezger engine used in previous GT3s. It revs to 9,000 rpm!
  • The four wheel steering adds value; the car turns in much better than the 997 GT3 and has less understeer.
  • The electric power steering is much, much better than in the 991 Carrera. It is “actually superb”, according to Chris. Not once, did he wish the car had hydraulic power steering.
  • The PDK is the best so far, but Chris would like the GT3 to be “the last bastion of the manual gearbox”. This is actually his only gripe about the car.

Summarising: it is much, much better than the 997. If you can live with a paddle shift gearbox, the GT3 is an amazing achievement.

Porsche 991 GT3

The verdict: BMW M135i vs Mercedes A45AMG (and CLA45AMG)

As you might have understood I really like the BMW M135i and the prospect of the Mercedes-Benz A45AMG.

Here are my earlier posts about these cars

Now, evo and TopGear have reviewed the Mercs and here are the scores:

evo (out of 5) TopGear (out of 10)
BMW M135i 4.5 9
MB A45AMG 4 8
MB CLA45AMG 3.5 6-7

Do you see a pattern?! It seems like the BMW is the car to have after all, although the Mercs are prettier…

Nya Maserati Ghibli – vill ha!

Maserati visar en helt ny modell med ett gammalt namn; Ghibli. Den är baserat på samma plattform som nya Quattoporte men är kompaktare. Nya Quattroporte, som visades för en tid sedan, har vuxit rejält jämfört med gamla Quattroporte vilket skapat utrymme för en ny mindre sedan i modellprogrammet. Ghibli kommer att konkurrera storleksmässigt med BMW 5-serie, Mercedes E-klass och Audi A6.

Det blir premiär för Maseratis första dieselmotor; en V6:a med turbo på 270 hästkrafter. Bensinversionen har också en V6:a med turbo på 410 hästkrafter och den går även att få med fyrhjulsdrift. Längre fram ryktas det om en V8:a.

Ghibli ska ha en hög utrustningsnivå som standard och priset är från cirka 610 000 kr för dieselversionen, vilket innebär att den hamnar på ett liknande pris som en 5-serie eller E-klass med sexcylindrig motor och riklig utrustning.

Uppdrag i Genève

Eftersom jag nyligen flyttat till Barcelona kunde jag inte bevaka Genève-salongen i år. I stället skickade jag min hemliga agent. Hans kodnamn är CD, kanske pga av hans diplomatiska talanger. Some say he hides in the Swiss alps and that he eats social democrats for beakfast…

Skämt åsido, här kommer CD:s krönika och bildgalleri från Genève:
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Generellt kan man väl säga att temat var downsizing, ett antal märken gjorde sitt bästa för att totalt gömma undan de SUV:ar de faktiskt har i line-upen (och tjänar mycket pengar på!), dessa sökte man förgäves med undantag för Jeep (inte så mycket val där ;–) och Cadillac, som helt i otakt med tiden placerat den vid det här laget ganska gamla Escaladen på prime position. ??!?!!? Och sen en jävla massa eltjafs också…

  • Största överraskning: att nya Honda NSX är snyggare än McLaren men Honda inte verkar ha fattat detta då de i princip gömt undan bilen. Tycker fortfarande McLaren saknar det där lilla extra. NSX ser oerhört bra ut!
  • Störst besvikelse: Jaguar F-Type. Vet att du gillade den, jag har fortfarande svårt för häcken som på något sätt lever wett eget liv mellan en Wiesmann och en E-Type. Märklig.
  • Fulast: nya Lambon. Helt klart. Oklart om det är ett stealth-plan eller en bil.
  • Största obegriplighet: att Mercedes fortfarande inte är kapabla att producera en infotainment-skärm som är i samma storlek som kokurrenterna. Kanske inte för att det behövs men nog är det konstigt allt. Updaten på nya E-klass (har ju den) inskränker sig f ö till….en analog klocka på insidan och nya strålkastare fram. Jaha.
  • Största överraskning som vettig familjebil: BMW 3-serie GT, väldigt fin och väldigt mycket rymligare än vanliga 3-serien!

Vill ha-listan (ur en familjefars perspektiv, utan inbördes ordning):

  • Vill ha 1: Maserati Quattroporte. Satan vad läcker och vilket lyft gentemot föregångaren, som jag hade tillfälle att åka i och köra. Riktigt läcker. Tyvärr bara 4-hjulsdrift i V6-versionen av utrymmesskäl…. Och hundarna fick jag väl sälja…
  • Vill ha 2: Nya Range Rovern. Jag har nog aldrig fått en så total lyxkänsla av att sätta mig i en bil någon gång. Ljusår från föregångarn. Somboende i ett alpland började det klia ordentligt i fickan här…
  • Vill ha 3: CLS Shooting Brake ser fortsatt oerhört läcker ut.
  • Vill ha 4: Alfa Romeo 4C, efter första faceliften då någon insett att strålkastarna fram ser ut som en Smart 4+4 och ersatt dem med något normalare.
  • Vill ha bara för mig själv: en KTM utan vindruta och en egen racetrack…;–)

Vill inte ha-listan:

  • BMW 6 Gran Coupé: vacker som en dag utifrån men det är något med BMW och mig, gillar inte insidorna och fortfarande inte infotainment
  • Mini vad-den-nu-heter-som-har-en-keps-som-tak: liten, trång, murrig, stor besvikelse
  • Jaguar kombi (diesel därtill): no comments
  • Jaguar XJ med tvåliters fyrcylindrig motor: borde förbjudas
  • Porsche Panamera: sällan har ett utseende åldrats så fort!

Bifogar lite telfontagna bilder. Just det ja, vem fan valde färgen på utställningsbilen av nya Rolls Coupén??!?

Porsche updates the Panamera and introduces a plug-in hybrid!

Porsche shows a facelifted Panamera, with a redesigned front and back. The most interesting part is that it is available as a Plug-in hybrid, which is quicker than the old hybrid while being able to cruise on “charged” electricity. The combined power of the V6 and the electrical motors is 416 hp, with a claimed fuel consumption of 3.1(!) l/100 km.

The other big news is that the V8 engine in the Panamera S and 4S is replaced by a new twin-turbo V6 engine with 420 hp.

More info at evo.

Porsche Panamera S E-Hybrid