chun
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2024
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- Location
- Switzerland
- Vehicles
- Taycan Turbo 2020, Cayman GT4

- Thread starter
- #1
Since this car has been discussed quite a lot on this forum, and many claims of it never coming to production with that power and configuration, I thought it might be appropriate to post some reviews of it, as the car has started shipping to customers since early March/ late Feb:
The car comes as standard with the biggest carbon fiber brake discs in any production car (430mm), and with the same akebono brake calipers used by porsche for the taycan turbo (6 pistons front, 4 back). Taycan turbo S does come with 10 pistons front however.
The review below includes track driving:
Neither of these reviews seem to include the "racing package", but Xiaomi does offer one for people that intend to track the car, combined with in-depth control over battery temprature and performance, with manual switches for battery pre-cooling for track use:
Car comes as standard with most technologies you'd expect of a high performance car: torque vectoring, dual-chamber air springs paired with high-performance adaptive dampers, active rear defuser, etc.
The car uses ready made of the shelf, foreign mostly, components (mostly - motors are in-house developed), including Italian Alcantara®, which makes the price of 70k even more impressive, as it is achieved with little of the vertical integration typical of Chinese manufacturing. This does however make this car one of the most expensive chinese EVs on the market.
I would say quite a successful first car, first EV and first EV motor developed in-house, all developed in 1 to 2 years, and already on the road.
The car comes as standard with the biggest carbon fiber brake discs in any production car (430mm), and with the same akebono brake calipers used by porsche for the taycan turbo (6 pistons front, 4 back). Taycan turbo S does come with 10 pistons front however.
The review below includes track driving:
Neither of these reviews seem to include the "racing package", but Xiaomi does offer one for people that intend to track the car, combined with in-depth control over battery temprature and performance, with manual switches for battery pre-cooling for track use:
Additionally, they are offering as an option the hood and ventilation system used by the test car to achieve the nurburing record.For enthusiasts who crave ultimate performance, Xiaomi SU7 Ultra offers "Racing Package" to choose from. It includes Bilstein® EVO R for Ultra coilover shock absorbers, ENDLESS® high-performance brake pads, Pirelli® P ZERO™️ fifth-generation high-performance tires, an additional set of Pirelli® P ZERO™️ TROFEO RS semi-slick tires, 21-inch U-shaped forged wheel hubs, carbon fiber rear wheel arches, a 1.7㎡ carbon fiber roof, and more.
Car comes as standard with most technologies you'd expect of a high performance car: torque vectoring, dual-chamber air springs paired with high-performance adaptive dampers, active rear defuser, etc.
More details on specifics of the car: https://www.mi.com/global/discover/article?id=4328The car is powered by CATL Qilin 2.0 battery (93.7 kw). As one of the most powerful mass-produced battery packs available, it delivers a maximum discharge rate of 16C and a maximum discharge power of 1330kW. When the power is only 20% left, the discharge power can still reach 800kW. The highest charging rate is 5.2C (520kw), enabling 10% to 80% charging in just 11 minutes. The CLTC range reaches 630km
The car uses ready made of the shelf, foreign mostly, components (mostly - motors are in-house developed), including Italian Alcantara®, which makes the price of 70k even more impressive, as it is achieved with little of the vertical integration typical of Chinese manufacturing. This does however make this car one of the most expensive chinese EVs on the market.
I would say quite a successful first car, first EV and first EV motor developed in-house, all developed in 1 to 2 years, and already on the road.
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