2010 Porsche Panamera
Price |
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Production |
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Engine |
V6 & V8 |
Weight |
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Aspiration |
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Torque |
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HP |
300 - 500 hp |
HP/Weight |
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HP/Liter |
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1/4 mile |
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0-62 mph |
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Top Speed |
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(from Porsche press
release) Stuttgart. Roughly nine months before the actual
market launch, Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Stuttgart, has released
the first official photos of the Panamera in its final look. In its
design, profile and silhouette, Porsche’s unique four-seater stands
out clearly as a new member of the Porsche family. Conceived and
designed as a four-door grand touring sports car, the Panamera
combines numerous talents in typical Porsche style: sporting driving
dynamics, a generous and variable interior, and the supreme driving
comfort of a Gran Turismo. Joining the 911, Boxster and Cayman
sports cars as well as the sporty SUV Cayenne, the Panamera is
Porsche’s fourth model series.
The designers of the Panamera have succeeded in positioning this
unique car as a brand-new and truly different model while
nevertheless retaining the looks of a typical Porsche. Through its
proportions alone, the Panamera stands out clearly in its market
segment: measuring 1931 millimetres or 76.0 inches in width, the
Panamera is wider, and measuring 1418 millimetres or 55.8 inches in
height, lower than comparable four-door models. The unmistakable,
sleek GT silhouette is created by the car’s overall length of 4970
millimetres or 195.7 inches and short, sporting overhangs front and
rear. In its styling and details, the Panamera follows the design
philosophy refined over decades on the 911 and successfully
implemented also on the Boxster, Cayman and Cayenne.
Through its design language alone, the Panamera will establish a new
segment versus the competition. The symbiosis of sports car DNA
derived from the looks of a coupé, the unique interpretation of the
classical saloon body and the benefits of a variable space concept
give the new Porsche its truly unmistakable appearance. As an
example, the Panamera comes with highly individual, strongly
contoured air intakes instead of a conventional radiator grille.
Striking wheel arches and the long and sleek engine compartment lid
create that typical 911 “landscape” at the front end of the car the
Porsche customer has appreciated for no less than 45 years, with the
distinctly contoured wings as flanks bordering on the flat front
lid. The V-shaped seams along the engine compartment lid and the
rear window tapering out like an arrow to the rear convey the
features characteristic of a sports car to the new, highly
individual Panamera class. The striking, muscular shoulders over the
rear wheels, the dynamic sweep of the coupé-like roofline, and the
visible tailpipes again bear out all the DNA so typical of a
thoroughbred Porsche.
The elegant roof arch extends stylishly over the generous interior,
simply begging the beholder to get inside. Like all Porsche models,
the Panamera is oriented in every respect to the needs and wishes of
the driver. But now, thanks to the new concept of space and the
sporting architecture of the interior, the car’s occupants are also
able to experience this special “pilot feeling” on all four seats.
All four occupants enjoy supreme ergonomic comfort on both the front
seats and the two firmly contoured single seats at the rear. The
luggage compartment easily takes up all the passengers’ luggage. The
variable space concept with its folding rear seat backrests enables
the driver and passengers to adjust the luggage space individually
to their personal requirements. And last but not least, the coupé
tailgate in the sporting rear end combines superior suitability for
daily use with stylish elegance.
Porsche has developed superior and up-to-date power units for the
Panamera again reflecting all the qualities typical of the brand –
the V-engines within the engine compartment come with six and eight
cylinders and range in power from 300 to 500 bhp. Some of the
engines use turbocharger technology, Direct Fuel Injection making
them both fuel-efficient and powerful all in one. The flow of power
to the wheels goes either through a manual six-speed gearbox or the
new seven-speed Double-Clutch Gearbox, the so called Porsche-Doppelkupplung
(PDK).
In addition to sporting
rear-wheel drive, the top version of the Panamera comes with even
more sophisticated all-wheel drive, which is also available for the
other versions as an option. As a further highlight, Porsche is
preparing a particularly fuel-efficient version of the Panamera with
hybrid drive. Further details on the engines, transmissions,
performance, prices and equipment will be disclosed next spring.
The Porsche Panamera will be built at Porsche’s Leipzig Plant, where
a production hall measuring some 22,000 square metres or almost
237,000 square feet and a logistics centre are currently under
construction. While the engines featured in the Panamera are built
at Porsche’s Main Plant in Zuffenhausen, the painted bodyshells will
be supplied by the Volkswagen Plant in Hanover. The Leipzig Plant
will then assemble the Panamera for final delivery, with an annual
sales target of some 20,000 units. Porsche is once again cooperating
largely with German suppliers in the production of the Panamera,
with some 70 per cent of the car’s overall value being created
domestically. Hence, the Panamera is most definitely a car “Made in
Germany”.
The Panamera will be making its world debut in spring 2009 and the
first models will be at dealers worldwide in late summer of next
year.