Sport: fit for the racetrack
Mode switch on the multifunctional
GT sports steering wheel for four driving
modes – plus SPORT Response but ton for
maximum responsiveness.
Safety: reinforced
Lane Change Assist and further reinforced
brake system – greater driving pleasure as
well as greater safet y.
Stress-relief: daily
New lif t system – for increased ground
clearance over ramps. Adaptive dampers
on all vehicles – for enhanced comfort
during everyday driving.
Connect Plus: web-connected
Always on-board: innovative infotainment
centre with online navigation,
Apple CarPlay™, telephone module
and Connect apps.
There’s a good reason for looking forward again.
And many a compelling argument.
The highlights of the new 911.
Sports car fascination 13
Design: sharpened
New front and rear design with
four-spot LED daytime running lights,
three-dimensional taillights and
four-spot brake lights.
Power and efficiency: increased
New t win-turbo engines for more power,
considerably more torque, high rpm limit
and lower consumption.
Sound: more 911
New sports exhaust system with central
tailpipes announces where the 911
feels at
home: on the racetrack.
Driving dynamics: tremendous
New rear-axle steering improves driving
stability and agility.
Control: in every season
Enhanced Porsche Traction Management
(PTM) – for well-balanced handling and
optimum traction.
Appreciate a compelling argument – and love a good film? Scan code or go to w w w.porsche.co.uk/911- highlights and star t the video.
Design 17
The design of the 911 shows where we
come from and where our roots are. But
it also shows the direction of our thinking
and how we see the future.
The design language, proportions and
contouring follow the 911
tradition: with
wings that are higher than the front lid;
with headlights that are bulging and
round; with a roof line that slopes down
towards the rear over tapering side
windows. The overall appearance is low,
wide and sleek. Sports car proportions
that originated on the racetrack. An icon? Certainly – but only because we
continue its development. Our designers
focused on making the new 911
appear
even more precise, and by doing so they
created the blueprint for its future. With
a new lighting design and characteristic
four-spot LED day time running lights,
which have now been incorporated into
the Bi-Xenon main headlights. With
direction indicators that are even slimmer
than they were before. For a Porsche
that
is recognisably a 911, even from a
distance.
The front has been reshaped for an even
sportier look. The air intakes are larger,
the design is even more succinct. In the
side air intakes, new active air intake
flaps control aerodynamics and cooling
performance as required.
In summary: the new 911
shows plent y of
bite from the front. And the future has
whetted its appetite.
An innovation is a tradition,
forever being sharpened to look brand new.
Design.
Design 19
The rear encapsulates the heart of the
911: the engine. This is where it has been
beating since 1963. With the introduction
of the new drive configuration, it beats
harder than ever before. Some parameter
tweaking was therefore required, including
in the design.
First, then, let us explain the function
before we come to the form. A combustion
engine without air cannot do any work at
all. That ’s physics. A Porsche engine needs
a lot of air to breathe. That ’s motorsport.
And the turbocharged drive layout of the
new 911 Carrera and 911 Targa 4 models
inhales more than ever, thanks to the
longitudinally arranged slats of the rear
lid grille.
Conspicuous, in the best sense of the
word, is how to describe the prominent,
three-dimensional LED taillights. They
create a sculptural look, also t ypical of
the 918 Spyder. A design for tomorrow,
combined with engineering for a new era.
A hallmark of the all-wheel drive models
is the seamless light strip on the rear.
For the new
911 models, it has been
further refined. It is narrower and
appears to seep into the taillight units on
either side, with an illumination that has
never been so homogeneous – qualities
that accentuate the 44 mm wider rear of
the all-wheel drive body.
The design of the single-tube tailpipes in
stainless steel – two-tract on the S models
–
is new. Inspired by the 911 GT3: the
centrally positioned tailpipes of the
optional sports exhaust system. For
harmony of form, function and sound.
Sharp, sport y and timeless. The
contouring of the rear is even more
clearly defined, making it look wider,
brawnier and more heavily built.
That ’s our approach to the theory of
evolution.
Design 21
Design of the 911 Targa and
911
Cabriolet.
A legend of the 911 range, a classic, a
sports car dream – ‘the Targa’ always
will have a special place at Porsche.
Conceived 50 years ago as a ‘safet y
cabriolet’, the Targa gained its reputation
as a design icon thanks to its st yle-
defining roll bar. With the innovative fully
automatic roof system now in its seventh
generation, our engineers have seen the
Targa idea mature into a technical
masterpiece.
The roll bar, adorned with the ‘targa’ logo
underneath the side gills, and the
gracefully rounded rear screen bestow
the new 911
Targa 4 models with a
timeless elegance. Their engineering hallmark is the
inclusion of all-wheel drive as standard.
For added driving stability, reflected also
in the design, the body is 44 mm wider –
an impression accentuated by the
seamless light strip on the rear end.
Roof closed, the new 911
Targa displays
the profile of its 911
counterpart, whilst
offering the comfort of a Coupé. Open
the roof and the 911
Targa comes into its
own: a st yle icon that transcends fashions,
rich in tradition – even richer in future.
The new 911
Cabriolet models have also
always been characterised by open
virtues. Made for civilised cruising on
the coastal road, but also for some
sport y corner chasing in the mountains. Here, just like there, they excel with
powerful forward thrust, great agilit y,
and anticipation aplent y on every inch of
tarmac.
What does that have to do with design? A
great deal, because not only does the
innovative fabric hood capture the
elegance of a 911
Coupé silhouette, the
low drag coefficient and use of light weight
materials also mean that the 911 Cabriolet
models come uncannily close to matching
the performance of a closed-top 911.
Form and function once again working as
one. In a particularly aesthetic way.
Design 23
Hood.
The fabric hood of the 911 Cabriolet
models has a fixed glass rear screen and
three integral elements manufactured
from magnesium. Together, these make
the hood highly robust and, yet,
particularly lightweight. It’s also smooth
and firm, the fabric is kept taut, and the design line is elegant. The hood opens or
closes in around 13 seconds, up to a
speed of 31 mph.
The interior hood lining is made from a
heat-insulating and sound-absorbing
material, resulting in perceptibly
consistent interior temperatures and an effective suppression of wind noise.
Thankfully, however, even the hood’s
soundproofing properties are no match
for the resonant Porsche sound.
The new 911 Cabriolet models are also
equipped as standard with an electrically
powered wind deflector, which offers practically draught-free driving and
minimal wind noise with the top down.
Principle 31
Those who want to win the fight against
time and for efficient power delivery
cannot afford to carry unnecessary bulk.
Light weight construction is therefore
another core principle of the 911.
However, lightweight construction is not
intelligent unless the right material is
used in the right place on the vehicle.
That, too, is Porsche conceptual harmony.
For without body rigidit y, there is no
agility.
Likewise, driving dynamics and ride
comfort are inextricably linked. For the
bodyshell, therefore, our engineers used very thin, but nevertheless extremely
stiff, sheets of steel. Aluminium and
magnesium were used extensively in
areas such as the roof, the underbody,
the front and rear ends, the doors and
wings, and the engine compartment and
luggage compartment lids.
Such material efficiency reduces the
overall weight and, as a result, the fuel
consumption of the vehicle. It ’s what
makes the 911
the lightest sports car in
its segment. And we’re no less proud of
that leading position than we are of any
epoch-making racing victory.
The real opponent is not the other car.
But every single gramme.
Lightweight construction.
Aluminium
Boron-alloyed steel
Multiphase steel (ultra-high-strength)
Micro-alloyed steel (super-high-strength)
Deep-drawn steel
Principle 37
F o r 911 fans it ’s a question of faith, for
tech lovers it ’s an issue of performance:
rear or all-wheel drive?
The answer may turn out differently on
either side, but neither would be wrong.
Those who recognise the rear-driven
variant as being the one true 911
should
consider that the all-wheel drive setup
goes back to the legendary Paris–Dakar
Rally of 1984, when the Porsche 953
based on the 911
wrote its own chapter
in sport – and engineering – history. Fun
in the corners, by the way, is guaranteed
by both drive layouts. Two irreconcilable philosophies? Let’s
discuss a third: the design. The all-wheel
drive 911
models have a 44 mm wider
body, let ting it rest more firmly on the
road. An impression underlined by the
new light strip, especially after dark.
Another hallmark of the all-wheel drive
models: sheer supremacy. In every
corner and at any time of year. Porsche
Traction Management (PTM), the active
all-wheel drive system, varies the drive
force transmit ted to all four wheels as
the situation demands. This helps to
ensure solid roadholding and even bet ter performance. Simultaneously, of course.
In winter. Day in, day out. At the limits of
dynamic driving performance.
Fair-weather cars? The new 911
Ta r g a 4
models are any thing but. Here, the all-
wheel drive marries excellent traction
with excellent aesthetics.
Rear or all-wheel drive? Whatever stance
you take, the most fascinating philosophy
of life is and shall remain the practical
one. At Porsche, this philosophy has been
about the road for well over 60 years.
Even philosophical questions
can be answered with outstanding performance.
Rear-wheel and all-wheel drive.