Showing posts with label Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 July 2011

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time #1 Porsche 356

Porsche’s 356 was the first Porsche to do, or be, anything. It was the first Porsche-branded vehicle ever built, the first Porsche to win a motor sports competition and the first Porsche to be sold in the United States. In other words, there literally would be no Porsche were it not for the 356. The car’s feathery weight and attention to performance made the 356 a formidable sports car, and owners on both sides of the Atlantic enthusiastically raced them to great success.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time #3 Porsche 917


Steve McQueen drove a Porsche 917 in the film Le Mans, and while that alone is reason enough to put this car on the list of the greatest Porsches of all time, the 917 itself has the goods to solidify its place as one of the greatest race cars of all time. Powered by a flat-12 engine capable of over 620 horsepower, the Porsche 917 was hellishly fast. Flying under the Porsche/Gulf Racing banner, the 917 gave Porsche its first overall win at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1970, a feat it repeated the following year. Porsche officially retired the car in 1971, but the car would go on to conquer racetracks around the world for another 10 years.

Saturday, 2 July 2011

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time #2 1966 911S

There are so many great 911s, it’s hard to choose just one. Introduced in 1964 as the successor to the 356, the original 911 wrapped leading performance, luxury and technology in a package that still looks fresh and modern today. 1966 saw the introduction of the more powerful Porsche 911S (for “Super”), which featured a more powerful 158-horsepower flat-6, bigger brakes and a revised suspension.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time #4 Porsche 959



Not only did the Porsche 959 establish the blueprint for Porsche’s modern-day sports cars, it did so for the entire sports car industry. Unveiled in 1983, the 959 featured forward-thinking technologies such as an all-wheel drive system, a 450-horsepower turbocharged flat-6, magnesium wheels and run-flat tires. Even the body -- while common-looking today -- was incredibly advanced due to its slippery shape, flush headlamps and integrated bumpers. Porsche built a little over 200 models to meet FIA homologation requirements, but the car never achieved certification for North America. In 1998, a new U.S. law allowed cars like the 959 to be brought over under a “Show & Display” status, finally allowing us Yanks to enjoy a true icon of automotive history.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time #5 550 Spyder


Best known in the U.S. as James Dean’s fateful last ride, Porsche’s 550 Spyder was a formidable machine in its heyday. The successor to the original 356, the 550 was engineered to further Porsche’s status in the international racing community, and thus featured a more rigid frame, a lightweight, hand-built aluminum body and an engine mounted in the middle rather than the rear. Power output was modest at just 70 horsepower, but the overall package proved to be quite successful. Porsche 550s took home a one-two win at the car’s first ever race -- the 24 Hours of Le Mans, and the car continued to dominate legendary events like the Carrera Panamericana.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time #6 Carrera GT


Porsche’s 50-plus years of engineering innovations and achievements resulted in the Carrera GT. The jewel in the center of the Carrera GT crown is a 5.7-liter, 605-horsepower V10 engine originally designed for Le Mans duties, but tweaked to make it suitable for the street. Mated to a standard six-speed manual transmission, this lump helped propel the carbon-fiber-bodied rocket to 60 mph in less than four seconds and 125 mph is approached in less than 10 seconds. Top speed was rated at 205 mph. Though released less than 10 years ago, this road-legal race car is already considered a classic, and the world’s appreciation for this car will only continue to grow with time.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time - #7 718 RS 60


Porsche’s 356 and open-wheel racing variants enjoyed a successful run throughout the 1950s, but as racing regulations changed and the competition improved, Porsche needed to create a new car to remain competitive. Enter the 718 RS 60. An evolution from the 356 and 550 racecars, the 718 RS 60 carried more size and weight in order to meet the trunk, fender and windscreen requirements enacted by major sanctioning bodies. Motivating this extra mass was an all-new quad-cam four-cylinder rated at 160 horsepower. This car may be considered underpowered by today’s standards, but in its heyday, the 718 RS 60 snagged a number of important wins for Porsche, including overall wins at the 12 Hours of Sebring and the Targa Florio.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time - #8 911 Targa


Threats that the National Highway Transport Safety Association (NTHSA) would soon pass laws effectively banning the sale of convertible automobiles in North America prompted Porsche to create its 911 Targa, and subsequently a whole new vehicle type, in 1965. Porsche replaced the top of the 911’s roof with a removable panel to allow for an open-air driving experience, but everything from the B-pillar back remained in order to appease NTHSA safety regulations. Porsche went one step further and reinforced the remaining vertical pieces with an extra-thick steel roll bar -- just in case. Obviously the NTHSA never actually enacted its ban on convertibles, but the 911 Targa proved to be enough of a success that Porsche still sells a Targa version of the 911 to this day.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time - #9 Cayenne Turbo


Those who complain about the Cayenne diluting Porsche’s identity typically aren’t Porsche buyers, and it was people not buying Porsches that almost caused the company to shutter its doors forever in the early 1990s. Yes, the Cayenne was a blatant attempt to cash in on the SUV craze and sell more vehicles, but it helped Porsche sell a lot more cars, which not only kept the company alive, but brought in record profits, allowing Porsche to fund projects like the RS Spyder.

Top 10 Porsche Model All The Time - #10 911 GT3 R Hybrid


In 1900, 25-year-old engineer Ferdinand Porsche unveiled the first gas/electric automobile at the World Fair in Paris. One-hundred and ten years later, a gas/electric Porsche revolutionized motorsports -- the 911 GT3 R Hybrid. Using its ultra-hardcore 480-horsepower GT3 racer as a base, Porsche engineers added two 60kW electric motors to the front wheels to provide extra bursts of power when needed. That this system also saves fuel under race conditions is a more-than-welcome bonus. The 911 GT3 R Hybrid shows that going greendoesn’t have to be boring, and you can expect to see the technologies developed for this car trickle their way down to street Porsches in the near future.