The newest iteration of the Porsche 911, surely one
of the world’s greatest sports cars is headed India’s way.
The latest 997 model version is what the well heeled Indian automotive
enthusiast can buy provided he has deep pockets to not just own but
also to insure and maintain. Adil Jal Darukhanawala trips the light
fantastic as he makes friends with the 355bhp legend which is the newest
Porsche 911 Carrera S. Who says motoring journalism doesn’t have
its rewards?
They
say that if the gods are smiling on you they come and greet you to celebrate
the occasion in myriad fashions. Trouble is you not know which form the
almighty would don in your hours / days / months / years of pleasure.
Especially if as the Indian scriptures suggest that every human being
is a version of god, this mere mortal hasn’t been able to understand
who’s smiling on whom.
But
that last Saturday of June, some 70km away from Hanover, I knew that I
was in motoring heaven. And it had all got to do with the magic figure
911, those three digits which have enthralled sports car enthusiasts and
millions of admirers the world over since Porsche launched its classic
two-seater coupe to an unsuspecting public in 1963. Knowing that this
was going to be my second encounter (after the Cayenne SUV) in as many
months of experiencing Stuttgart’s finest, I wasn’t complaining
but just getting down to the serious business of having fun, at 270kmph!
The occasion
was a debut drive for Indian motoring journos, giving them first crack
at what is surely the most user-friendly high performance sports car in
the world. Porsche is coming to India as you have reed in our last issue
and the Cayenne SUV (four seats, large luggage space and high performance)
is expected to be the Porsche with appeal for Indian fat cats. However,
the quintessential icon which everyone associates with the German marque
has to be the 911 and this great rear-engined sports car will be on sale
in India by November this year. I am sure that anyone who is an automotive
enthusiast will revel in this bit of news because it opens up vistas and
avenues for other eclectic names to also make their appearance on Indian
roads-the logic being if Porsche is coming can Ferrari or Lamborghini
afford to be far behind? As such the introduction of the Porsche 911 will
surely by a landmark occasion to celebrate the ushering in of the high
performance car age in the country.
It
is early days yet but surely the latest 911 (model 997 in Porsche works
terminology) has been tamed and honed for even drivers of average skill
to take to high speed motoring quite comfortably and safely and that was
the first aspect I got to experience. I say this because of my experience.
I say this because of my entertaining drive in a ten-yeas-old 911 some
four years ago in Europe, the then 911’s handling had me running
scared.
But
before we proceed with the performance aspects and why I think a 911 would
look good in my driveway, let’s get down to unraveling the 997 package
which makes up the new 911 Carrera. To most the new 997 might look similar
to the classic shape which has mesmerised aficionados since the early
1960s. But hey, step closer and let your gaze roam over the details and
you can make out subtle differences over its predecessor, the 996. The
haunches are more muscular but so beautifully sculpted that the bulk is
never emphasised. The wider track and the slimmer, more accentuated waistline
highlight the taut muscularity while the new round headlamps (with xenon
lamps on Carrera S) make a move back to the classic detail of earlier
911s. Somehow I have never tired of the 911's shape ever since it was
ingrained in my psyche when I laid eyes on it for the first time though
keeping the faith and the form has been something of a disciplined chore
for the Porsche designers led by the legendary Harm Lagaay whose handiwork
the 997 is.
The
very first 911 I saw in the flesh was that of Vijay Mallya at the Sholavaram
race track some time in 1980 or thereabouts. It still stands out vividly
in my subconscious because it was the first time Vijay had entered a race
and he had brought this powerhouse of a car to outgun everyone on a circuit
which worshipped power and rewarded those who had an abundance of it.
Vijay was then just starting out in motorsport and a 911 driven in anger
by an up and coming driver was always something to behold. He took the
start, outdragged the rest and came down to the hairpin where too much
power saw the 911 swap ends, throwing it into instant retirement.
I
read and re-read millions of stories about the 911's handling quirks and
how the tail heavy machine needed not just delicate skill and finesse
but also big balls to hustle around circuits. It was therefore with some
trepidation that I ventured close to the new 997s at the famous Schlosshotel
Munchhausen (a castle built in 1570 which has now been converted into
a hotel) where Porsche had set up base for the drive session. But I needn't
have worried because help and advice came from a most welcome but unexpected
source: twice World Rally Champion driver Walter Rohrl. The German who
has also won the IMSA TransAm series as well as the Pike's Peak Hill
Climb for Audi, is the official tester for all Porsche road-going cars
and he informed me that this car wouldn't bite back. “The stability
control programme and wide track makes it very safe and enjoyable,"
he informed me when he took me out for a 50km drive in the Hanover forest
region. On the tight back roads in the Prussian countryside, the combination
of Rohrl and the latest 911 was intoxicating.
It
was difficult to understand first whether it was Rohrl making the car
sing to his tune or was it a fine medley of two greats strumming in unison.
Things became clear the next day when I was handed a 911 and told to get
on with a nearly 450km drive through some of the most scenic country roads
plus also a 120km stretch of high speed autobahn. From the moment I pressed
the clutch in time honoured Porsche tradition and hit the ignition key
to fire the flat six into life to the time I drove back into the schloss
that evening, I knew one thing: the 911 made me feel like Rohrl!
The
new 911 features one of the most potent engine packages in the business.
In fact anything over 220bhp is hot in our parlance but when you are talking
about 325 to 355 thoroughbreds from Weissach, one is in serious heavyweight
stuff. Porsche 911s have always been about a blend of power and balance
and this thought still pervades in the 997. The basic Carrera comes with
a 3596cc flat-six quad cam, all-aluminium water-cooled engine delivering
325bhp at 6800rpm and making 370Nm of torque at 4250rpm. If this is powerful,
wait for the Carrera S, Porsche bumping capacity to 3824cc and the boxer
six motor thus packed dishes out 355bhp at 6600rpm while making a prodigious
400Nm of torque at 4600rpm. These are Ferrari rivalling power and torque
figures and it is just as well that Porsche has refined the aerodynamics.
The Carrera S has a drag coefficient of 0.29 and incidence of axle lift
has been pushed lower on both ends while the underbody is now one smooth
flat surface.
The
new 911s come with a choice of transmission: either a brand new 6-speed
manual or the Tiptronic S gearbox. Handling 400Nm of torque meant the
6-speeder was the logical choice and I had that for the duration of my
run. That isn't meant to run down the Tiptronic but when you have a fire
breather of a motorcar, you want to be in control and take it to its limit
rather than the gearbox controlling how to get you there.
One
detail about the powerplant which caught my ear, that's right you did
hear me correctly, was the howling exhaust note which changed pitch and
tenor as the revs were dialled in more and more. I thought I had heard
sweeter notes before but here was automotive music to dance to as one
put the loud pedal to the floor. It was truly awesome and it yet reverberates
in my head whenever I think back to the 911 drive.
What
truly impressed me about the engine of the Carrera was its sheer tractability.
It could potter around at crawling speeds with no snatch or jerk but with
sheer silken delivery. Hit the throttle pedal hard and the horses would
just unleash the full force of their thrust pinning the driver into the
back of his seat horribly quickly yet without ruffling his composure.
Porsche claims a 0100kmph time of 4.8 seconds for the Carrera S,
a 0-160kmph time of 10.7 seconds and a 0-200kmph time of 16.5 seconds
putting it firmly into that band of ultra-quick projectiles which need
to be handled with respect. Add to that a top whack of 293kmph and one
can see we are talking performance unlike any other car which has bee
announced for sale in India. I have no reason to doubt the performance
claims because out on the autobahn, I had the Carrera's needle wound up
way past the 270kmph mark and would have gone even closer to the claimed
top end were it not for me coming up on traffic very quickly. The amazing
thing is that you do 100kmph in second gear, and as you keep on shifting
into one higher cog after another, the engine never drops off the revs
and the torque just gets thicker and thicker. The six-speed manual is
a fantastic piece of kit and using it - more and more - seems just the
natural thing to do. The clutch was nicely weighted and the short throws
to hit any of the six cogs just widened the smile more and more. I have
not driven any other standard production car which delivered so much confidence
and poise that going pedal to the metal was always a means of finding
my own limits rather than explore the even higher levels of the car's
performance envelope. |