2024 Cayenne

Author
Discussion

maxh

10 posts

135 months

Thursday 11th January
quotequote all
nick-g50hy said:
Hi Porsche experts,
There seem to be a few of you might be able to help me.
Considering ordering the hybrid (cayenne) but just wanted to check how the remote heating works. Remote cooling being less important as we live in Scotland.
Is the app pretty reliable? And once the battery power is empty would it just not work? I know volvo and JLR vehicles just remote start the engine to get heat if the electric has run out.
Currently in Tesla which for all its faults, heats via phone no problem, and can do individual seats/ steering wheel. Just wondered how it was on the new hybrid.

Thanks in advance

Nick
Remote heating/cooling via the Porsche app has been 100% reliable for us for both the last and current generation Cayenne. It won't work when either the electric range is too low. It won't work when the petrol range is too low either. I'm afraid I can't remember how low for either but low enough for it not to be an issue for us.

You can control what seats you heat and what temperature you set the car. It can be timed or started there and then, and defaults to 30 minutes of heating/cooling.

It's a great feature and one we use often.


nick-g50hy

95 posts

72 months

Thursday 11th January
quotequote all
Hi that's great, thanks.
So it would fire up the ICE to warm the car up?
Or just the battery?
Sorry to be a bit slow.

Good to hear the app is solid too.

J210

4,520 posts

183 months

Thursday 11th January
quotequote all
Been told update is due March....

maxh

10 posts

135 months

Friday 12th January
quotequote all
nick-g50hy said:
Hi that's great, thanks.
So it would fire up the ICE to warm the car up?
Or just the battery?
Sorry to be a bit slow.

Good to hear the app is solid too.
It does not start the ICE to warm the car up. Pre-conditioning is via the battery only.

nick-g50hy

95 posts

72 months

Friday 12th January
quotequote all
Last question... promise.
Can you keep the car on petrol usage, if you want to preserve some battery? I work shifts and the idea of coming out of a night shift to a frozen cayenne fills me with dread!!

Thanks for your help. It's appreciated

floriankarch

3 posts

3 months

Friday 12th January
quotequote all
J210 said:
Been told update is due March....
What is your source ? You are from what country ?

Thanks.

maxh

10 posts

135 months

Friday 12th January
quotequote all
nick-g50hy said:
Last question... promise.
Can you keep the car on petrol usage, if you want to preserve some battery? I work shifts and the idea of coming out of a night shift to a frozen cayenne fills me with dread!!

Thanks for your help. It's appreciated
Yes - you can set the car to hold the electric charge. The normal reason for doing that would be for driving a long way on the motorway but know that at the end of the journey you will be driving in a city/town and that it would be best to hold the electric charge for then. In your case it would work too.

If you use the inbuilt Porsche nav, for the example I've given, and set the car to "Hybrid Auto", it works out the best use of petrol/battery for the whole journey.

Jon_Brown91

15 posts

4 months

Friday 12th January
quotequote all
floriankarch said:
What is your source ? You are from what country ?

Thanks.
My OPC has told me the same

HoHoHo

14,987 posts

250 months

Friday 12th January
quotequote all
Jon_Brown91 said:
floriankarch said:
What is your source ? You are from what country ?

Thanks.
My OPC has told me the same
And mine

Rhea247

2 posts

3 months

Saturday 13th January
quotequote all
J210 said:
Been told update is due March....
Hi, do you mind telling me who your OPC is? Mine is Wolverhampton and they know nothing and tell me Porsche don’t release any updates!

J210

4,520 posts

183 months

Saturday 13th January
quotequote all
floriankarch said:
What is your source ? You are from what country ?

Thanks.
UK, source multiple OPC's

our car is coming up to a year since deposit was down....

simbagolf21

4 posts

3 months

Sunday 14th January
quotequote all
My OPC advised that they have been notified by HQ of an update to be released on 19th January which shall solve all of the outstanding issues, he said to expect the car to be ready to collect the following week if all goes to plan, fingers crossed

KC911

9 posts

4 months

Sunday 14th January
quotequote all
exert from Porsche's latest 2023 Sales update:

The model with the highest number of deliveries was the Cayenne. Examples of the SUV were delivered to 87,553 customers last year (-8 per cent). The decline compared to 2022 can be explained by the model change – including the staggered launch of the new generation worldwide since the market launch in April, as well as a software update for the hybrid models to ensure the best possible quality.

..acknowledgement there seems to be a fundamental problem behind the scenes.


Edited by KC911 on Sunday 14th January 17:20

diametric123

134 posts

112 months

Sunday 14th January
quotequote all
To all the posters above (rightly) talking about delayed delivery dates...

You could always have my experience of getting a new model e-hybrid in mid Oct and have the joy of random dashboard warnings lights pop up at any time for any reason! Tried to book it in with local OPC and they told me to wait at least two months for availability

Other than that, great car

nick-g50hy

95 posts

72 months

Sunday 14th January
quotequote all
Sorry to hear this.
At the risk of being nosy. Are they "do not drive" type warning lights or random ones that go off a few minutes later.
Not good.

GT4RS

4,430 posts

197 months

Sunday 14th January
quotequote all
diametric123 said:
To all the posters above (rightly) talking about delayed delivery dates...

You could always have my experience of getting a new model e-hybrid in mid Oct and have the joy of random dashboard warnings lights pop up at any time for any reason! Tried to book it in with local OPC and they told me to wait at least two months for availability

Other than that, great car
Did the suppling opc give you a nine faulty new porsche to use when yours wasn’t having a melt down, or did they expect you to just drive the faulty one??

GTS440

213 posts

195 months

Monday 15th January
quotequote all
diametric123 said:
To all the posters above (rightly) talking about delayed delivery dates...

You could always have my experience of getting a new model e-hybrid in mid Oct and have the joy of random dashboard warnings lights pop up at any time for any reason! Tried to book it in with local OPC and they told me to wait at least two months for availability

Other than that, great car
Just for some balance, I have a November 1st Registred 2024 Cayenne E-Hybrid now with with over 2000 miles covered and it has been faultless. Very impressed with it and i have owned the 2 previous generations (non hybrid).



J210

4,520 posts

183 months

Monday 15th January
quotequote all
GTS440 said:
Just for some balance, I have a November 1st Registred 2024 Cayenne E-Hybrid now with with over 2000 miles covered and it has been faultless. Very impressed with it and i have owned the 2 previous generations (non hybrid).
This is what makes no sense. If it's a software fault how are there cars on the road without the so called fault.

Its all very odd.

diametric123

134 posts

112 months

Monday 15th January
quotequote all
Random lights mainly about 'engine management problem but its ok to keep driving'

Going through a narrowed speed-restricted version of the M4 at the weekend I got a 'keep your hands on the steering wheel' or something

They all last for say 60 seconds then disappear

maxh

10 posts

135 months

Monday 15th January
quotequote all
GTS440 said:
Just for some balance, I have a November 1st Registred 2024 Cayenne E-Hybrid now with with over 2000 miles covered and it has been faultless. Very impressed with it and i have owned the 2 previous generations (non hybrid).
Our November E-Hybrid has been faultless too, as was our previous gen that we had for 4 years.