PH Fleet: Porsche Panamera Diesel
Bye bye diesel Jag, hello diesel ... Porsche? Yep, Harris has got a Panamera for a few months
Replacing the Jag is another diesel exec saloon - if you can call it that. 10 years ago, the concept of a four-door Porsche using an Audi diesel engine would have seen me marching outside Weissach's front gates and burning effigies of Herr Piech. But flat-earthers like me are beginning to understand that the world has changed. I now have several months in a Panamera Diesel. The relationship has started well. Very well.
The Panamera is possibly the most divisive Porsche of all. Many despise the way it looks and what it stands for. In my experience, almost all of those negative voices are eradicated if they spend any time in one, either as a driver or a passenger. Especially if you include very long journeys. At least 10 times a year I have to get from the UK to some other corner of the continent, and the Panamera Turbo is the best tool for the job.
The Turbo defence
But what happens when you remove the speed?
The Diesel version has just 250hp, and it weighs 1,880kg. It compensates with 405lb ft of diesel torque and the promise of some impressive fuel economy figures. From the spec sheet this car is the least appealing Porsche since the 911 SC was castrated in the late 70s for Californian emissions targets.
Honestly, having covered 2,500 miles in it already, I can't think of another car whose real-world behaviour is so far removed from its static credentials. In its own way, the Panamera diesel is one of the best cars Porsche makes - and that is just a plain bizarre sentence to watch creep from my keyboard. The reasons for this become apparent within a few minutes of first driving it. This is the best diesel installation around. It offers a faint crack when it fires, but after that it isn't just quiet, the noise that seeps into the cabin is a pleasant, deep, V6 rumble.
All that you need
Diesel meant ditching PDK for the ubiquitous ZF eight-speed auto, and that's improved the package further. Sometimes an engine and gearbox just gel; this is one of those instances. It is seamless in the true sense of the phrase and therefore incredibly soothing. That's what I want from a car of this type.
I also want it to be stellar over long distances and a recent smash'n'grab raid to southern Germany proved, beyond any doubt, that this car is world class in that respect. Three-up, and crammed full of gear it would cruise quietly at 120mph, still returning 30mpg. On the 612-mile return leg, which included some stationary time and a sustained stint in the 130-140mph window, the car averaged 37.2mpg. That is astonishing. Anything I might have gained in a Turbo pulling 150-180mph would have been undone by the need to refuel. I even did a stint in the back and nearly fell asleep. This is unprecedented.
Different class
Not just in terms of quality either. The Panamera's steering isn't just good, it's a flipping magic trick. It somehow makes this vast machine agile and instinctively easy to thread down narrow roads. The driving position - low, with the wheel at your chest - is terrific and it's just a fun car to drive fast. Again, I can't believe I've written that.
This car runs on standard steel springs, not the optional air-suspension, and on weeny 19-inch wheels. Yes, I specifically asked for the small wheels because they bring a fleshier 45-profile sidewall and the result is a firm but composed ride. It's no S-Class, but the overall compromise of agility and waftability is very pleasing.
Basic luxury
As you can probably tell, I like this car. In fact the only negative aspects so far are apologetically droopy tail-pipe trims and the fact it's only a four-seater. Which, for those of us with three kids, renders the Panamera a bit useless. With Mercedes making its CLS Shooting Brake a five-seater, you have to wonder if Porsche is missing a trick not selling a five-seat version of this car.
I defy anyone to drive or be driven in a Panamera Diesel and not be profoundly impressed. The haters will always hate, but, right now, there isn't another car I want to be using the way I use this one. Oh, and I even like the way it looks.
FACT SHEET
Car: Porsche Panamera Diesel
Run by: Chris Harris
On fleet since: August 2012
Mileage:
List price new: £66,558 (base price £62,134 plus £777 for metallic paint, £1,457 for 19" Panamera Design alloy wheels, £243 for automatic dimming mirror package, £919 for Bose surround sound system, £227 for Universal Audio Interface USB/iPod connector, £526 for aluminium interior package and £275(!) for 'seatbelts in silver')
Last month at a glance: Diesel Panamera turns out to be one of the most capable, and likeable, cars in the Porsche stable
Can you please explain what you mean by it compensates for having 250bhp by having over 400lb ft of torque? That makes no sense. What's the difference between the diesel, say making 400lb ft at 2k rpm and a petrol making 300lb ft at 3k rpm (both a bit under 1/2 max rpm).... The laws of physics suggest you wouldn't feel any difference in acceleration. So what exactly do you mean? To feel the same as the petrol turbo it would need even more torque because of rpm difference.
You've said this about lot in recent posts but it doesn't really add up. Especially when you briefly compared the turbo diesel to the turbo petrol.
Now if someone could please order one with a reasonable spec. and 19" wheels, and look after it well for 5 years so I can buy it from them for £25k.....
SS7
Can you please explain what you mean by it compensates for having 250bhp by having over 400lb ft of torque? That makes no sense. What's the difference between the diesel, say making 400lb ft at 2k rpm and a petrol making 300lb ft at 3k rpm (both a bit under 1/2 max rpm).... The laws of physics suggest you wouldn't feel any difference in acceleration. So what exactly do you mean? To feel the same as the petrol turbo it would need even more torque because of rpm difference.
You've said this about lot in recent posts but it doesn't really add up. Especially when you briefly compared the turbo diesel to the turbo petrol.
Can you please explain what you mean by it compensates for having 250bhp by having over 400lb ft of torque? That makes no sense. What's the difference between the diesel, say making 400lb ft at 2k rpm and a petrol making 300lb ft at 3k rpm (both a bit under 1/2 max rpm).... The laws of physics suggest you wouldn't feel any difference in acceleration. So what exactly do you mean? To feel the same as the petrol turbo it would need even more torque because of rpm difference.
You've said this about lot in recent posts but it doesn't really add up. Especially when you briefly compared the turbo diesel to the turbo petrol.
The semantics of torque - and how it, and its effects, are expressed is a pedants paradise on which far too much time is wasted.
This car has more everyday poke than its performance figures suggest. I think I've made that clear.
I simply cannot comprehend for the life of me, how people think the car is ugly when they consider other cars out there, which do not attract so much as a grumble. The irony of people who own any modern Peugeot, any modern Vauxhall, even most Audi's with their absurd DRL's, calling the Panamera ugly simply tells me that a lot of people seem to have no sense at all.
No -one seems to mind the latest Mercedes CLS either. I quite liked the old one, but when I saw a new CLS the other day I was shocked at how goppingly wrong it looks. The Panamera is gorgeous compared to the new CLS.
But, of course, it is a purely subjective thing. I do wonder, however, if sometimes these things become an accepted mantra that is simply followed by the masses, like so many sheep. Many people seem to continue to quote Clarkson, so this theory has some merit...
Anyway. Its a fine car. Fit for a purpose. And it looks the way it does for a reason - if they reduced the length of the rear roofline, made the rear quarter a little less heavy, it would look not unlike an Aston Rapide. Given that the Aston Rapide is a sales flop, primarily because it is neither one thing nor the other, with compromised rear space, this in my opinion demonstrates why Porsche got it right.
The Panamera is also a sales success. I believe it is (or at least has been in level pegging with the Cayenne) Porsche's best selling car. And for a good reason.
The only area of regret I have is over the engine. Audi have a mighty V8 diesel. It is a shame that you have to buy a ( genuinely ugly ) Audi A8 or a VW Toureg to get access to it. It would be lovely in the Porsche.
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