Either this is the moment you’ve been waiting for since the first 991-spec Porsche 911 prototypes were spotted testing on the road back in 2008, or you should look away now as we drive the first of many iterations of the new generation rear-engined icon.
And rear engined it still most obviously is: that silhouette is unmistakable. The sleeker rear lights are almost concept car-esque, but actually make the rear look rather narrow; the nose is wide though, and looks odd with the goatee black plastic chin spoiler. And even on the Carrera S the central intake is blanked off – Boxster and Cayman S models get triple intakes.
Read on for CAR’s first drive review of the new Porsche 911
So, highlights of the all-new 991-generation Porsche 911 please…
It’s the car we’ve tested, but the £10k cheaper Carrera now has a 3.4 rather than a 3.6-litre engine. The power output is up (340bhp at 6500rpm is now 345bhp at 7400rpm; 288lb ft is unchanged but now produced at 5600rpm rather than 4400rpm) but emissions and fuel consumption have dropped so this is Porsche’s cleanest ever sports car: 34.5mpg and 194g/km with the PDK ‘box.
Common to both is a clever thermal management system, trick generator controller, a stop/start system, while the manual gearbox has seven speeds, and the PDK ‘box has a coasting function that decouples the engine and lets it idle if you’re off the throttle. It’s similar to the system on the Audi Q3, so you start to freewheel, so you brake, and the system instantly couples back up to provide engine braking. Defeats the point really.
What about inside the new Porsche 911?
Spacious. There’s an extra 100mm between the front and rear axles, and despite the roofline being 6mm lower, there’s a huge amount of space. Our test car was fitted with heated and ventilated electric seats, but you sit as low as you’d ever like, lanky lads no longer bash their knuckles on their knees when turning the wheel, and even Georg Kacher wouldn’t complain about the headroom despite the fitment of the optional sunroof. Okay, only (small) children still fit in the back, but it feels almost /too/ big up front.
Quality levels have taken a huge leap forward, but if you’re expecting a fresh interior then the sat-nav, the dials and a myriad of buttons will be familiar to 997 owners – this new 911 isn’t /all/ new. And if you’re a fan of the workmanlike, upright interior of every 911 ever, then the Cayenne and Panamera-inspired sloping centre console might not to be your taste. Oh, and I can’t stand the electric handbrake or electric steering column adjustment.
Leather, climate control, bi-xenon lights, a seven-inch sat-nav screen, MP3 and USB connectivity are standard on the Carrera, while the Carrera S gains inch bigger 20in wheels, adaptive dampers, and the Porsche Torque Vectoring system (it selectively brakes the inside rear wheel) with a limited slip differential.

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