The Porsche, all four wheels clawing for
traction, leaps forward like a pouncing
cougar. The engine sounds like you are
destroying it, and you'd think the doubl
Legends regarding the "hounds of hell" have existed since Greek
mythology, but I wasn't entirely sure what their baying would sound like
until the 2011 Porsche 911 Turbo S arrived: Step on the throttle, and
there's a pack of them right behind you, and the sound is both
exhilarating and a little terrifying.
The all-wheel-drive Porsche Turbo S, with a twin-turbocharged, 3.8-liter
six-cylinder engine that pumps out 530 horsepower, can be as docile as
a puppy when you cruise around town. But it comes with this evil,
addictive feature called "launch control:" Find the nearest dragstrip – or
in our case, a long private road owned by a friend – and come to a stop.
Press the "Porsche Sport Plus" button, Place your left foot on the brake,
and your right foot on the accelerator. Yes, all the way to the floor.
Then take your left foot off the brake.The Porsche Turbo S, with it's all wheel drive system clawing for traction,
leaps forward like a pouncing tiger. The engine sounds like you are
destroying it, and you'd think the double clutches in the transmission
would fry like eggs on a Florida sidewalk, but there is no post-launch
drama. This is what the Porsche 911 Turbo S is built to do, over and over
if you like, and one reason it costs $162,460.
It is astounding how race-track-ready this Porsche is, despite the leather
interior, Bose stereo, heated seats, power sunroof, navigation system,
Bluetooth – anything you'd expect on a luxury car. By far the largest
number of entries in sports car races like the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona,
or the 12 Hours of Sebring, are Porsche 911s. Years ago I track-tested a
full-on Porsche race car that later sold for well over $1 million. After
climbing into the single carbon fiber seat and cinching up all the safety
belts, I asked, "Where is the starter button?" The crew chief said, "This
is a Porsche. Turn the key." That Porsche would put a key in a 200-mile-
per-hour race car suggests how serious the company is about
maintaining that narrow gap between race car and street car.That said, what kind of street car does the 2011 Porsche 911 Turbo S
make? Actually, a very good one. There's a "Sport" and the
aforementioned "Sport Plus" button, either of which stiffens up the
suspension and places the transmission shift pattern into a nervous,
edgy condition that makes around-town driving feel like you've had far
too much caffeine. But on the regular setting, the 911 is docile and
reasonably quiet, with a ride that is comfortable on all but the roughest
roads.The 911 Porsche Turbo S has a rear seat, but I've yet to actually try and
wedge anyone back there. It serves mostly as a convenient, extra
storage space, complementing the 3.7-cubic-foot trunk up front. Raise
the rear hatch and you'll find that it's quite full of engine.One of the most interesting aspects of the car is the PDK transmission,
which stands for Porsche Doppelkupplung, meaning it has a dual-clutch
gearbox. It operates like a regular automatic transmission, but with the
internal clutches, the sensation is very much like a manual transmission's
operation, but you don't have to shift, and there is no clutch pedal.
There are levers on the steering wheel that allow you to shift up and
down manually, but the PDK is so competent and intuitive, I just let it
shift for itself.The list of performance features is long and complicated, and includes
PASM – Porsche Active Suspension Management– a super-sophisticated
system that makes split-second adjustments to the firmness of the
suspension, based on what the onboard computer is telling it. The all-
wheel-drive system is transparent, as it should be, in normal driving, but
very evident in "launch control" mode. The huge ceramic composite disc
brakes are incredible, and in concert with the massive 19-inch tires,
make the 3,500-pound car feel like it weighs far less.Base price of the
car was $160,700, and with heated seats ($525) and "Porsche crest on
headrests" ($285), total price was $162,460, including shipping. This is a
spare-no-expense car, and it feels like it.But Porsche 911 turbo models hold an amazing percentage of their
resale value for a very long time, and the 911 Turbo S is the sort of
vehicle that I can envision crossing a collector-car auction block in 30
years, and selling for a sort of price a classic deserves. Is it expensive?
Oh, my, yes. But when Porsche spares no expense in building it, they
expect the handful of customers who can afford it to spare no expense,
either. Good for them: They're getting a remarkable car.
We can go on and on about how this PorscheBoxster 987 performance tuned exhaust andmuffler gives the sure-footed but somewhatmild-mannered Porsche Boxster S ...
From time to time I have been asked to offermy perspectives on things I have foundcommon in successful traders. I have alwaysstruggled with my reply to that......
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