Main menu

Pages

Edit post

Expect More Purist Driver's Cars From Porsche GT


Reports that the purist driver's car is dead have been greatly exaggerated. At least one automaker is committed to keeping the format alive – and that automaker is Porsche.

According to Autocar, the success of models like the Cayman GT4 (pictured above), 911 R, and the new 911 GT3 Touring show the bean-counters in Zuffenhausen that there's some people at least still want naturally aspirated sports cars with manual transmissions.

“The GT4 showed us there was demand for a pure driving Porsche with a manual gearbox,” said Porsche GT chief Frank Walliser. “This theme of ‘pure and simple’ is a success in other fields too, like scrambler motorbikes and single-speed bicycles. People like simplicity.”

The immediate product of that thinking is the new Touring package for the GT3 – which, unlike the previous 911 R, isn't a limited edition that'll sell out before all interested buyers get their chance. And there'll be more.

Next down the pipeline will be a new Cayman GT4, which is likely to go with the atmospheric six that the new 718 did away with on all other variants. “We won’t do a performance four-cylinder,” Walliser told Autocar.

Don't expect the same treatment to be applied to lower-powered versions of the 911, though, or other models in the Porsche lineup. The GT division (which does the GT2, GT3, and GT4 models) has said it will never do a crossover like the Macan or Cayenne, and the Panamera (we'd add) hardly seems ripe for the hardcore treatment, either.

Photo Gallery

reactions

Comments

table of contents title