đź“° Auto News Porsche Panamera images and details leak out

Mook

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According to AutoTelegraaf, the image above is the first official picture of the Porsche Panamera, showing the new four-door "coupe" in all its oddly proportioned glory. The Dutch pub released the image and details on the sedan after Auto Motor und Sport supposedly broke the Monday embargo. More details will be released late Sunday night, but in the meantime, let's look at the reported specs.

The Porsche Panamera Gran Turismo is 16.3 feet long, 6.3 feet wide and 4.66 feet tall, with a wheelbase of 9.6 feet. Weight hasn't been disclosed, but its roughly two tons. The most striking detail on the profile shot is the indentations leading from the front fenders, aft of the wheels, into the doors, but the jury is still out on the Panamera's bulbous back end. The slippery shape and low profile gives the sedan a drag coefficient of 0.29, while an electronically actuated rear spoiler will keep things planted at speed.

An electronic air suspension is part of the package, along with an LSD, and power can be sent to either the rear wheels, or all four, depending on the trim level. Motivation will be provided by a range of engines, beginning with 3.6-liter V6 putting out 300 hp, and continuing upwards with the 400 hp, 4.8-liter V8 Panamera S and the Panamera Turbo, packing a twin-turbocharged version of the same bent eight putting out an estimated 500 hp. Power will be sent to Porsche's new PDK dual-clutch gearbox and although a diesel model has been ruled out, a V6-hybrid variant with 350 hp will come along at a later date.

Porsche aims to sell approximately 20,000 units of the Panamera each year, with the automaker estimating that 20% will be the range-topping Turbo model. The Panamera will only be available in S and Turbo guises at launch, with the V6 model following shortly thereafter. Once established, Porsche hopes demand will increase to 50,000 units annually, with sales beginning in the U.S., Europe and Asia next year.

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slowchevy

eat ass drive fast
Sep 10, 2007
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this porsche is all wrong.
four doors on a porsche car = fail
front engine on a porsche car = mega fail

i agree with jared, it's just a squished cayenne.
There was nothing wrong with the Cayenne.

Also, the position of the engine doesn't make it "wrong."

Four doors on a porsche car is not "fail"

Front engine also is not "mega fail"

FYI, The first car that wore Ferdinand Porsche's name was the 356.. A small, hand-built aluminum roadster with a mid engine rear drive layout.

The Cayenne SUV was Porsche's answer to a question nobody answered.

"Who can make us an SUV that will easily do 150+ Miles per hour, seat 4+ comfortably, be able to go through some of the worlds most harsh road conditions, and remain reliable"

The Cayenne put a Porsche vehicle on the map for the average person who wants something practical, yet a little showy, with a great build quality.

The position of the engine, the amount of doors, the type of chassis.. that isn't what makes a Porsche a Porsche.

What makes a Porsche a Porsche.. is the passion that goes into building them. The customers.. the enthusiasts.. the engineering teams that make it possible to push the envelope with every new vehicle they bring to the table.




The Cayenne sold phenominally in its first year out and still continues to sell strongly.

I believe that when this car comes out, it will be the same case again. Porsche is branching slowly away from being exclusively sports cars, into becoming a world class full line automaker. I believe this is a step in the right direction.. all the while maintaining Porsche heritage with sleek lines, benchmark setting performance, maintaining the prestigious image brought forth by previous models, and most of all.. staying a Porsche.
 

Burtonrider10022

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Feb 25, 2008
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Real Name
Yes
There was nothing wrong with the Cayenne.

Also, the position of the engine doesn't make it "wrong."

Four doors on a porsche car is not "fail"

Front engine also is not "mega fail"

FYI, The first car that wore Ferdinand Porsche's name was the 356.. A small, hand-built aluminum roadster with a mid engine rear drive layout.

The Cayenne SUV was Porsche's answer to a question nobody answered.

"Who can make us an SUV that will easily do 150+ Miles per hour, seat 4+ comfortably, be able to go through some of the worlds most harsh road conditions, and remain reliable"

The Cayenne put a Porsche vehicle on the map for the average person who wants something practical, yet a little showy, with a great build quality.

The position of the engine, the amount of doors, the type of chassis.. that isn't what makes a Porsche a Porsche.

What makes a Porsche a Porsche.. is the passion that goes into building them. The customers.. the enthusiasts.. the engineering teams that make it possible to push the envelope with every new vehicle they bring to the table.




The Cayenne sold phenominally in its first year out and still continues to sell strongly.

I believe that when this car comes out, it will be the same case again. Porsche is branching slowly away from being exclusively sports cars, into becoming a world class full line automaker. I believe this is a step in the right direction.. all the while maintaining Porsche heritage with sleek lines, benchmark setting performance, maintaining the prestigious image brought forth by previous models, and most of all.. staying a Porsche.


:ugh: who the fuck stole s00ls computer???


and i see a lot of C6 in the front end... overall....id rock a turbo
 
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