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All
Terrain Sportscar
A Porsche
for five? For me to drive? In the desert sands of the UAE? Am I seeing
a mirage or has the shamal got to me? None of it and yet all of it because
that is what so clearly defines driving the best all terrain high performance
machine in the world in the best of environment tailor made for it. And
why all this excitement? Nothing could be a better reason to go dune raiding
in Dubai in a Porsche Cayenne than for the fact that it is India bound.
I was wondering
whether the idea to head to Dubai on my own was such a good one. Coming
just an hour into my drive with the Porsche Cayenne which was getting
bogged down in the soft sandy wastes of the Dubai desertscape. The office
knew that Porsche was finally coming to India and from that I surely knew
that even though the staple product of the Stuttgart-based sports car
maker has been the evocative 911, its best-seller in India would surely
be the Cayenne SUV. Of course this is still conjecture because no Porsche
has officially gone on sales in India as yet but judging from the sales
performance of the M-class Mercedes, expect many to opt for the proper
five-seater Cayenne over the 911 or the Boxster. I would do this if I
had the money and especially after my drive over the dunes in Dubai.
But getting back to where I began, we had requested the German car maker’s
Middle East and African liaison office in Dubai to arrange for yours truly
to drive the Cayenne and the Boxster and surprisingly they agreed. I jetted
down to the commercial hub of the UAE, spent a day getting acclimatised
and the next day was rumbling out of town in a silver grey Cayenne with
a minder from Porsche and my brother Neville riding shotgun. The plan
was to first drive down the expressway and then turn off into the desert
to explore and experience the capabilities of Porsche’s large SUV
built to challenge not just the likes of the BMW X5 and the Mercedes-Benz
M- class but also the very notion that Porsche could also build machines
to perform effortlessly on hard shoulders and soft soil. 
I thought
I knew it all but the desert showed me otherwise. Minutes after turning
off the road at a wadi where Neville usually takes SUVs to photo shoot
for his automotive publication in the UAE, I thought I should be easy
enough with the car so that I could soak up the scenery and the experience.
That was a bad mistake and I knew it the second I decided to go easy.
The car bogged down and we were stuck. The Porsche minder then got to
work and he just about extricated the car and we were rolling again. Neville,
with more than three years of desert driving experience began to tell
me how to drive and what telltale signs I had to look out for to denote
soft and dangerous patches as against hard packed desert surfaces where
the Cayenne could fly.
I took heart
hearing the surface existed for flying but before I could head out to
it, within another five minutes it was that unmistakable sinking feeling
as I bogged down yet again. This time we were stuck well and proper for
over half an hour, and because we had no back-up car, it needed a slight
deflation of the 255/55 R18 tyres and Neville to take the wheel. The half
hour in the desert proved like ten times that and I was drenched with
sweat and the heat was beating my temples like someone had turned a blowtorch
on my face. Makes me marvel at the stamina and the endurance of the rally
raiders, be they doing the Dakar or the UAE Desert Challenge.
Once we had
extricated ourselves and Neville had got us on to firmer terra firma -
pun surely not intended, I got behind the wheel yet again. It was a series
of dunes which led away and we had to drive in the direction of the wind
and the wavy worm of the dunes. I knew the Cayenne had all-wheel drive,
it had V8 Porsche power and that there was the Porsche Traction Management
(PTM) system at my beck and call and the only thing I didn’t need
was to make another mistake.
The Cayenne
helped me to drive better, no doubt about that. The trick technology on
board saw to it that I wasn’t making beginner’s mistakes any
longer and if I was, the mistakes didn’t mirror the same intensity
which had seen us get bogged down twice earlier. Or as I started to unravel
the whole experience in my mind on the flight back home, the technology
only hid my mistakes and worked around them to enable me to drive in a
natural, conventional manner. One of these could have been the incline
sensor which cut in a most unobtrusive manner whenever I was tackling
gradients, silently modifying the shift points for better uphill thrust.
Or it could also have been the Porsche Traction Management (PTM) system
working along with the Porsche Active Suspension Management (PASM) which
ensured that it never wasted an iota of its prodigious torque, applying
it where it was needed most.
Once on the
packed dune surfaces the Cayenne was a dream. It would skim along at over
150kmph and it was only the ripple on the sand dunes which gave a hint
that we weren’t as yet airborne! Could also have been the fact that
the optional air suspension (OE on the top of the line Cayenne Turbo)
was doing a wonderful job of isolating me just enough to feel as if I
was on billiard smooth tarmac. I was having fun thundering on the sides
of the dune slopes (not having yet mastered the way to jump them and also
not being brave enough to get bogged down when the nearest help was almost
an hour away!), squirting the throttle delicately just to get the naturally
aspirated V8 to sing along while at the same time turning in to avoid
a gully and stay on the hard stuff. It was the stuff of dreams, a dream
that this could only have been happening in a sports car.
This fact
only hit me when we decided we better get back on a normal black top and
as things would have it, we had come to the bay side where there were
narrow back roads with hardly any traffic flow either side. I thought
nothing could get better than my stint on the dunes but then I was not
thinking Porsche perfect.
One thing
which I recollect now was that even when I got on to proper roads, I didn’t
seem to have been quizzing the Porsche minder! Obviously the great feeling
that the car was responding brilliantly to my every input was mind numbing
and intoxicating put together and then it being to slowly but surely ram
home the point, that hey buddy, you are in a Porsche.
The first
hint came when I began to take corners at speeds which would have had
the local constabulary haul me away for having too much merriment. The
large and tall Cayenne cornered absolutely flat with hardly a trace of
roll making me think that I was driving at an old codger’s pace.
As I prepared to take a few more corners, it was Neville who cut in and
said if I wasn’t careful I would be going around corners at 160kmph
or more, having seen me go progressively quicker as the kilometres racked
up on the odometer. No, he wasn’t trying to calm his shattered nerves
but to tell me that sometimes other cars also did trundle down this seemingly
deserted road. |