Manyana
Active Member
- First Name
- Paul
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2022
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 31
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- Gold Coast Queensland Australia
- Vehicles
- , 718 Spyder, Taycan 4S CT
Me too!Would like to hear your thoughts on that switch once the T is in.
Me too!Would like to hear your thoughts on that switch once the T is in.
I think the Taycan handles extremely well. The suspension quality and tuning is fantastic. For me, the difference between the Taycan and the 911 is not just the big difference in overall weight, but rather the distribution of that weight. The rear weight bias of a 911 is a truly unique characteristic that has a huge impact on how it handles and how it should be driven. The uniform weight distribution of the Taycan makes it feel fundamentally different, which isn't bad per se, but it impacts the way that you need to drive it, and thus the two cars seem to have really different "characters". Sort of like the difference between a 911 and a Cayman: they are made by the same manufacturer, but they do feel really different when you drive them.I have a 992 Turbo S and a Taycan GTS. On the back roads they're closer than folks want to admit, and I doubt anyone that is dug in will stop denying that. I haven't tracked my Taycan so I can't say how it compares there, but for your weekend drives it's really really impressive what they did with the Taycan.
Oh yes, I agree they feel different, that was never a question. But I think what folks have a hard time understanding is that from a capability standpoint, the Taycan is a lot better than they want to admit. Especially for the type of driving most of us do - canyons or backroads, the Taycan is effectively tied with the 911 from a capability standpoint. (Feel is different) I still think you'd really need to take these to the track before the capability of the 911 outshined the Taycan.I think the Taycan handles extremely well. The suspension quality and tuning is fantastic. For me, the difference between the Taycan and the 911 is not just the big difference in overall weight, but rather the distribution of that weight. The rear weight bias of a 911 is a truly unique characteristic that has a huge impact on how it handles and how it should be driven. The uniform weight distribution of the Taycan makes it feel fundamentally different, which isn't bad per se, but it impacts the way that you need to drive it, and thus the two cars seem to have really different "characters". Sort of like the difference between a 911 and a Cayman: they are made by the same manufacturer, but they do feel really different when you drive them.
I agree with you about 95%. The way that I do not think they are effectively tied is that my Taycan CT feels much bigger than my 997 911. This is not surprising, of course, but it is harder to feel as comfortable in a vehicle that is -- and feels -- much bigger. Now, I know that the 911 has grown over the past 18 years, so maybe this is not as much of an issue if you compare '23 Taycan with '23 911, but still.Oh yes, I agree they feel different, that was never a question. But I think what folks have a hard time understanding is that from a capability standpoint, the Taycan is a lot better than they want to admit. Especially for the type of driving most of us do - canyons or backroads, the Taycan is effectively tied with the 911 from a capability standpoint. (Feel is different) I still think you'd really need to take these to the track before the capability of the 911 outshined the Taycan.
Agreed. I live near some pretty fantastic roads that I grew up driving on. I've taken the GTS on these roads and there's no way a sane person is going to see a performance difference between the 911 and a Taycan. Take the cars to the track and drive them at 10/10ths and then you will see the quantitative difference. We can all agree that the cars feel completely different.Oh yes, I agree they feel different, that was never a question. But I think what folks have a hard time understanding is that from a capability standpoint, the Taycan is a lot better than they want to admit. Especially for the type of driving most of us do - canyons or backroads, the Taycan is effectively tied with the 911 from a capability standpoint. (Feel is different) I still think you'd really need to take these to the track before the capability of the 911 outshined the Taycan.
Yeah, I would disagree with you there. My GT4 cornered much more capably that my Taycan. Speeds where the Taycan wants to under steer into the weeds, the GT4 just sucks down into the road. There is a sweeper near my house that I could easily take at 125 in my GT4, that gets scary at 90 in the Taycan. The Taycan is a great car, but even Porsche can’t defy the laws of physics.Agreed. I live near some pretty fantastic roads that I grew up driving on. I've taken the GTS on these roads and there's no way a sane person is going to see a performance difference between the 911 and a Taycan. Take the cars to the track and drive them at 10/10ths and then you will see the quantitative difference. We can all agree that the cars feel completely different.
A 35mph difference in turn? That's laughable. Your trollish posts never disappoint. Zero credibility.Yeah, I would disagree with you there. My GT4 cornered much more capably that my Taycan. Speeds where the Taycan wants to under steer into the weeds, the GT4 just sucks down into the road. There is a sweeper near my house that I could easily take at 125 in my GT4, that gets scary at 90 in the Taycan. The Taycan is a great car, but even Porsche can’t defy the laws of physics.
it was probably raining when the Taycan took it at 90.A 35mph difference in turn? That's laughable. Your trollish posts never disappoint. Zero credibility.
Do you know what the weight distribution of the various iterations of the 911 are?The rear weight bias of a 911 is a truly unique characteristic
My 911s, at least the ones with stability control, have never been unstable or “tail happy”. You can’t really ever turn it fully off on water cooled 911 street cars, unfortunatelyDo you know what the weight distribution of the various iterations of the 911 are?
I had a quick internet search expecting it would be the first thing to come up, but it wasn't.
The aircooled variants aren't as extreme as people often think, both because the air cooled engine isn't actually that heavy and because the driveshafts are angled backwards, so the engine weight isn't as far behind the axle as it could be.
It certainly didn't benefit from 4WD at all until the power went up a lot though.
A lot of mid engined cars end up with the front axle almost comically rearward to get a more balanced WD yet it doesn't get mentioned, my Ferrari 355 is a classic example.
Now, with a water cooled engines and the turbos practically in the rear bumper, maybe it has become more extreme.
The old theory about the tailhappy handling of the 911 being due to it being rear engined turned out to be wrong, it was the lift-off toe out of the old semi-trailing arm rear suspension and its bushings fixed by the 5 link rear suspension replacement about 25 years ago but still persisting in "common knowledge".