The Herald (South Africa)

Porsche unveils 911 Turbo S speed fiend

- Motoring Reporter

The 2020 Geneva Internatio­nal Motor Show has been cancelled due to the coronaviru­s, which is why Porsche pulled the wraps from its new 911 Turbo S on Tuesday.

Powered by a 478kW/800Nm 3.8-litre sixcylinde­r boxer engine and available as a coupé or cabriolet, this newcomer is the quickest of the current 992 range, with a claimed 0100km/h sprint time of 2.7 seconds and 200km/h coming up in a mere 8.9 seconds.

With your foot flat and on a long enough road you’ll be able to reach a top speed of 330km/h. To help keep it stuck to the asphalt, Porsche has widened the car’s track.

Compared to its predecesso­r the body is now 45mm wider above the front axle and 20mm wider above the rear axle.

Adaptive aerodynami­cs have been carried over and improved upon, thanks to the addition of controlled cooling air flaps at the front, as well as a larger rear wing designed to produce even more downforce.

For the first time the Turbo S now ships standard with tyres in two different sizes: 20inch tyres at the front and 21inch tyres at the rear.

Porsche says this improves the car’s handling and nimbleness.

Other standout features include Porsche Traction Management (PTM) all-wheel drive and a bespoke eightspeed PDK transmissi­on that’s been specially tuned to handle the extra power and torque twisted out by that 3.8litre motor.

You’ll also find a Porsche Active Suspension Management (PASM) sports chassis that has been lowered by 10mm and a sports exhaust system with adjustable flaps that guarantees a distinctiv­e sound.

Inside, a full leather interior and carbon trim, combined with Light Silver accents, are included in the standard equipment list.

The 18-way adjustable sports seats feature stitching that pays homage to the first 911 Turbo (type 930).

Other standard features include the GT sports steering wheel, the Sport Chrono package with the newly integrated Porsche Track Precision app and Bose Surround Sound system.

The new Porsche 911 Turbo S will arrive in SA in May.

The Turbo S Coupé is a wallet-singeing R3,542 000 and the Turbo S Cabriolet R3,716 000, including a threeyear/100,000 Driveplan.

 ??  ?? LOW FLYING: A bigger rear wing helps improve downforce at speed
LOW FLYING: A bigger rear wing helps improve downforce at speed

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