2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S First Test Review: Full Circle

I have the Porsche 911 Targa to thank for my love of cars. My dad shared his passion of cars with me before I could even walk, but I think it was my grandfather’s—my Papa’s—1980 Porsche 911SC Targa that cemented my love of all things on wheels. My Papa only had his 911 Targa for the first eight years of my life, but those years proved formative. As a toddler, I remember sneaking into my grandparent’s Silver Spring, Maryland, garage to peek at his silver Targa, and when I was big and brave enough, I’d hop in the driver’s seat and imagine what it was like to drive. I never did get the chance to drive Papa’s 911—he sold it back in 1997—so when the chance to test the new 991.2-series 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S came up, I jumped at the opportunity to get a little taste of what I missed out on.

Unlike the two generations of Targas that graced the Porsche lineup between Papa’s 911SC and my 991.2-series tester, the current 911 Targa is a faithful tribute to the original. Whereas the two earlier generations of Targas were little more than 911 Carreras with large glass sunroofs, the 991-series Targa nails the look and feel of the original—it sports a cloth top and the iconic targa bar and teardrop-shaped rear glass. The new 911 Targa is true to the look of the original but perhaps not the simplicity. All it took to remove the cloth top on an old 911 Targa like my Papa’s was to yank a couple latches and pins, pull the cloth top off, and stow it in the frunk. Simple.

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S front side

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S front end in motion 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear end in motion 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear three quarter 02 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S side profile

Stowing the new 911 Targa’s top can be done from the comfort of the driver’s seat, but Porsche has made the world’s simplest soft top infinitely more complex. Essentially a hybrid between the hardtop 911 Carrera and Cabriolet, the 911 Targa uses the Cabriolet’s power folding top mechanism to stow the cloth top from the comfort of the driver’s seat. Press the same switch you’d use to put down the top on a 911 Cabriolet, and the Targa’s clamshell rear hatch opens up and back to form a Z shape, two flaps on the sides of the Targa bar shoot open, and the top folds back to stow behind the rear seats underneath the glass for all to see. The Targa bar flaps then close as the clamshell comes back down to earth. The whole process is incredibly complex and takes about 20 seconds while stationary to complete.

Technology marches forward under the hood of the 911 Targa, too. My 2017 911 Targa 4S tester sports the same displacement, cylinder count, and configuration as my Papa’s old air-cooled 911SC, but that’s about where all the similarities end. The 991.2 911 Targa 4S is powered by a water-cooled 3.0-liter twin-turbocharged flat-six producing 420 hp and 368 lb-ft of torque—that’s 248 more horsepower and 179 more lb-ft of torque than the old 911SC. The Targa also has more gear ratios and more driven wheels than the rear-drive 911SC with a five-speed manual; our tester is equipped with the PDK seven-speed dual-clutch automatic (a seven-speed manual is standard) and all-wheel drive, which is currently the only available drivetrain option on the Targa.

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S wheels 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S side mirror 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear view 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear quarter 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear badge 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S badge 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S exterior 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S frunk

Like all current 911s, this one is a performer, but let’s take a quick look at its predecessor first. Although we never tested a 911SC Targa, we did test a 1983 911SC Cabriolet that accelerated from 0 to 60 mph in 6.4 seconds, the quickest time we ever recorded with a 911SC. Thanks to modern technology, launch control, and all-wheel drive, our 2017 911 Targa 4S sprints from 0 to 60 mph in just 3.3 seconds. By the time it takes the old 911SC to hit 60 mph, the 911 Targa 4S has already nearly hit 90 mph. A little more than 5 seconds later—at 11.7 seconds, to be exact—the 911 Targa 4S blows through the quarter mile at 117.8 mph. Were it lined up with its modern counterpart at the strip, the 911SC Cabriolet follows 3.2 seconds later at 91.1 mph.

This Targa can stop and turn, too. With modern ABS and summer tires, our Targa 4S tester completed the 60–0 panic stop in an impressive 97 feet and averaged 1.04 g on the skidpad—a 47-foot shorter stop and 0.22 g more grip than its predecessor. We didn’t do figure-eight testing back in the ’80s, but it’s safe to say the old car couldn’t touch the 911 Targa 4S’ 23.8-second lap, averaging 0.85 g.

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S interior view 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S gear knob 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S gauge 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S front interior view 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S front interior seats 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S drive mode 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S door sill 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S center stack screen

I recall one of my first rides in my Papa’s old 911 when I was about 5 years old. I can’t exactly say why Papa decided to take me for a ride that day, but I can vividly remember how content I felt with the warm summer air flowing through the cabin and that flat-six singing behind us as he worked through the old Porsche’s five-speed gearbox. That day wasn’t particularly notable otherwise, but I never forgot what it was like to be in a good sports car on a gorgeous summer day.

I think I would’ve been even more impressed with the current 911 Targa 4S and its remarkable ability to combine daily drivability with supercar levels of performance. In the hustle and bustle of the Los Angeles grind, the 911 Targa is an exceptional commuter. The 911’s new turbocharged engine works seamlessly with the transmission to always have enough torque on tap to plug a gap in traffic or pass a Prius in the left lane all while still returning an indicated 18.7 mpg over nearly 900 miles of mixed testing. The EPA rates it at 21/27/24 mpg city/highway/combined. Ride quality for the Porsche is also excellent over some of L.A.’s more poorly maintained roads, and unlike many convertibles, outward visibility is excellent, thanks to the wrap-around bubble rear glass.

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S side top down

The 911 is even better on a good back road in its sport modes. Sport mode is the less aggressive of the two sport modes on the 911 Targa. It loosens traction control restrictions, firms up steering, keeps the Porsche’s flat-six in a lower gear than it would normally, and most importantly adds a healthy dose of crackles and pops from the optional sport exhaust system on overrun. Sport+ is better still and is what I opted for more often than not on canyon roads. It firms up the suspension, shifts more aggressively to maximize the engine’s output, and sharpens steering even more. Even with the extra 300 pounds or so of weight the Targa 4S carries versus a 911 Carrera 4S, it isn’t noticeable on back roads; the Porsche still remains as eager to please as ever, rocketing from corner to corner with sharp, direct steering, great feedback from the road, and a torquey engine that loves to rev.

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S front side 02 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S front three quarter 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear three quarter in motion 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S rear three quarters

Although the 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S might be a great everyday driver, there’s no denying it doesn’t have an everyman price. With prices starting at $123,650 for a Targa 4S, our lightly equipped tester rolls off dealer lots for $149,970. Just to bring things full circle, a brand-new 1980 911 SC Targa started at around $30,000, or around $88,690 in 2017 dollars. The cheapest 911 you can get today, a 911 Carrera, starts at $92,150. Inflation is something, isn’t it?

Some might be turned off by the 2017 911 Targa 4S’ high cost of entry, but people don’t buy 911s—or sports cars, period—for practical reasons. I recently asked my Papa, someone I’ve known my entire life to be an incredibly practical man, why he bought his Targa back in 1989. He told me that after providing for his family his whole life and having retired from a long career at IBM, he wanted to reward himself with a fast European sports car. It was an emotional decision, not a practical one, and in a life where we’re all attempting to make practicalities supreme, sometimes you just have to do something that makes you feel good. With that top stowed, that twin-turbocharged flat-six singing, and a good road in front of you, the new 911 Targa 4S fits the bill just as nicely today as it did for my Papa and those like him 28 years ago.

2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S
BASE PRICE $123,650
PRICE AS TESTED $149,970
VEHICLE LAYOUT Rear-engine, AWD, 4-pass, 2-door convertible
ENGINE 3.0L/420-hp/368-lb-ft twin-turbo DOHC 24-valve flat-6
TRANSMISSION 7-speed twin-clutch auto.
CURB WEIGHT (F/R DIST) 3,675 lb (38/62%)
WHEELBASE 96.5 in
LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT 177.1 x 72.9 x 50.9 in
0-60 MPH 3.3 sec
QUARTER MILE 11.7 sec @ 117.8 mph
BRAKING, 60-0 MPH 97 ft
LATERAL ACCELERATION 1.04 g (avg)
MT FIGURE EIGHT 23.8 sec @ 0.85 g (avg)
EPA CITY/HWY/COMB FUEL ECON 21/27/24 mpg
ENERGY CONS, CITY/HWY 160/125 kW-hrs/100 miles
CO2 EMISSIONS, COMB 0.83 lb/mile

The post 2017 Porsche 911 Targa 4S First Test Review: Full Circle appeared first on Motor Trend.



from Motor Trend http://ift.tt/2n3Gkjg

April Fool’s Day 2017 Automotive Roundup

It’s April Fool’s Day, and in spite of all the recent concerns over fake news, a few companies chose to have a little fun and put out some phony press releases and videos. Here are a few of the best hoaxes making the rounds in the automotive sphere.

Lexus Lane Valet

Lexus raised the hopes of drivers who are tired of cars clogging up the left lane, issuing a release on its fictitious Lane Valet system. The vehicle-to-vehicle technology automatically orders a slower car in front of you to change lanes and let you by. In a few years, such a feature might actually be possible, though perhaps a bit morally questionable.


Honda Horn Emojis

The car horn can convey many different messages despite offering just a single tone. On April Fool’s Day, Honda proposes expanding the range of expressions in its cars with Honda Horn Emojis. The extra buttons on the steering wheel have faces corresponding to the emotion they convey. The horn itself can produce multiple tones to better express happiness, frustration, and more.


Fate of the Furious/Xfinity Drive-out Cinema

Telecommunications company Xfinity partnered with the eighth movie in the Fast and the Furious franchise, Fate of the Furious, to prank some people who think they’re getting a sneak peek at the film. The victims are skeptical from the beginning. After all, being asked to sit in an actual car from the movie and strap into a racing harness is pretty suspicious when you’re just supposed to be watching some movie clips. The participants in the driver’s seats are in on the prank, and are in fact stunt coordinator Oakley Lehman and pro drifter Ken Gushi. Eventually, the prankees get a wild ride through a movie set complete with explosions and other special effects.


Lyft Mono

Because the tech industry keeps telling us wearables are the future, this ridiculous fantasy gadget from Lyft is almost believable. Looking like a Power Glove for hitchhikers, the Lyft Mono features an illuminated thumb that lets you summon a ride by simply raising your opposable digit. Lyft writes in the YouTube video description: “Lyft has always strived to be the most intuitive app out there. But even a few taps can be reduced to one, or none, right?” The fake future sure looks lazy.


McLaren 570GT Feather Wrap

McLaren takes its biomimicry design philosophy to the next logical step with this package for the 570GT. The automaker’s quest for maximum aerodynamic performance has driven it to look at nature for ideas, and what creature in the animal kingdom is more aerodynamic than a bird? The feather wrap package uses 10,000 carbon-fiber-veined artificial feathers to “create the most aerodynamic edition of the 570GT yet.” Wondering when you can get yours? This fine-feathered upgrade is available only on April 1.


Google Maps Ms. Pac-Man

So the automotive connection is a bit loose with this one, but Google Maps’ prank may be the best one this year. If you’ve logged on to www.google.com/maps/ or turned on the app in the past 24 hours, you’ve probably already noticed the Ms. Pac-Man icon. Click it and you’ll get to play the 1981 arcade classic at your location and on the surrounding streets. We have yet to verify if the Easter egg works on Android Auto.

Google Maps April Fools 2017 Ms Pacman prank

What was your favorite April Fool’s Day hoax this year? Tell us in the comments below.

Lyft Mono April Fools prank Lexus Lane Valet 05 Lexus Lane Valet 03 Lexus Lane Valet 02 Lexus Lane Valet 01 Honda Horn Emoji April Fools Lexus Lane Valet 04

The post April Fool’s Day 2017 Automotive Roundup appeared first on Motor Trend.



from Motor Trend http://ift.tt/2oLdSPE

True North: Why Automakers are Still Betting on Electrification – The Big Picture

A tale of two worlds: As President Trump attempts to kick-start America’s coal mining industry, rolling back regulations and gutting environmental protections, Britain revealed its carbon emissions were the lowest since Grover Cleveland was in the White House—since 1894, to be precise—thanks to policies explicitly designed to discourage coal use.

Another tale of two worlds: While automakers petition the Trump administration in Washington to rescind fuel economy standards that would require their U.S. vehicle fleets to average 54.5 mpg by 2025, at the annual Geneva show they proudly touted fuel-efficient hybrids, cars that run on near CO2-neutral synthetic methane gas, and electric vehicles.

The line between hypocrisy and hard-nosed business savvy is often thinner than a politician’s promise. Automakers don’t make policy, however. Politicians do. And automakers are navigating political worldviews heading in fundamentally different directions.

Capitalizing on the Trump administration’s anathema toward environmental regulation is opportunistic and likely driven by a desire to save spending R & D dollars on ultra-fuel-efficient vehicles Americans now say they don’t need or want. (You can partially thank cheap gas prices for the current consumer psychographics.) But although the U.S. remains an important and lucrative market, it’s no longer the true north for the world’s automakers. That much was clear at the 2017 Geneva show.

Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E front three quarter Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E rear three quarter Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E rear end Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E front end Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E concept front three quarter Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E driver side interior Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E front grille Bentley EXP12 Speed 6E interior view

rolls-royce-102EX-front-three-quarters

In 2011 Rolls-Royce unveiled the 102EX concept at Geneva, a giant Phantom sedan with two electric motors developing a total of 390 hp and 589 lb-ft of torque. A year later, the project was dead. Extremely wealthy Rolls-Royce customers simply weren’t interested in a car with a 100-mile range and an eight-hour charge time. Six years later, Bentley’s EXP 12 Speed 6e Geneva concept put the ultra-luxury electric car back on the agenda. What’s changed? Battery performance, for a start: If a production version of the EXP 12 Speed 6e were built, it would have a range of at least 300 miles, says Bentley’s engineering chief Rolf Frech.

But technological advances are merely part of a bigger story: “I think the environmental situation has changed a lot,” Frech says, noting large, compressed cities are contemplating curbs on vehicles with internal combustion engines in order to improve local air quality. The mayors of Paris, Mexico City, Athens, and Madrid have already announced a ban on diesel vehicles from 2025. Persistent, choking smog in Beijing and New Delhi has also prompted restrictions on vehicle use in those cities.

Even though many electric cars are automotive muesli—vehicles designed to look like they’re saving the planet—the glittering, extravagantly proportioned EXP 12 Speed 6e, which previews design elements of the next-generation Bentley Continental GT, is hedonism on wheels. Underneath the glamour, though, is a pragmatic response to a coming trend. “We want to make it possible for our customers to go wherever they want,” Frech says. And that includes cities. “What is important is that even if they are only driving 10 miles or at 10 mph, customers should feel they are driving a Bentley.”

Bentley EXP 12 Speed 63 Front Three Quarter Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Side Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Side View Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Rear Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Rotary Control Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Drivers View Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Cabin View Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e Interior Seats

In America, in the context of cheap fracked gas and Trump’s environmental policies, the Bentley EXP 12 Speed 6e would seem doomed to the same fate as the Rolls-Royce 102EX. But that’s not necessarily how the rest of the world will see it.

More than a half-million electric vehicles were sold in China last year, a 50 percent increase on 2015 sales that effectively doubled the number of EVs on the world’s roads. The Chinese predict a total of 5 million EVs will be in service by 2020, which explains why they are also spending billions on lithium-ion battery raw materials and manufacturing plants. In three years China will be producing almost three times the lithium-ion battery capacity as the U.S., and that’s assuming Tesla’s Gigafactory in Nevada meets its ambitious targets.

America once set the agenda for the global automotive industry, but by 2020 emerging markets such as China and India are expected to account for two-thirds of the auto industry’s global profits. And if those markets demand luxury electric vehicles, they’ll get them. The development of those EVs, ironically, might well be paid for with the money automakers saved by not having to meet tougher 2025 American fuel economy targets.

The post True North: Why Automakers are Still Betting on Electrification – The Big Picture appeared first on Motor Trend.



from Motor Trend http://ift.tt/2nqpvdA