Spoiler alert: PH Blog
They're called spoilers for a reason says Harris
Once a marketing novelty, the electric lift-reducer is now commonplace, especially it would seem on VW group products. All Porsches bar the Cayman sprout something at speed, as do many Audis. The need to keep the rear axle on terra-firma should offer the styling department a perfect opportunity to get creative and beautiful, but having seen most of these protrusions fully-deployed over the past few weeks, it's hard to conclude that they are anything other than a bit ropey.
Take the Porsche 991. Neatly packaged around the arse area in the Porsche tradition, but once in full downforce mode it takes on the appearance of something that has been rear-ended by a Mercedes Sprinter. And underneath the rather apologetic winglet you can see nasty black plastic. It's horrid.
And only beaten in the spoiling (pun intended) stakes by the new Boxster's wing. Its crime is perhaps more pernicious than the 911's because it utterly destroys the lines of the best looking Porsche since the Carrera GT. I wince whenever I overtake one on the M4. If I owned one I think I'd pull the fuse and stomach a few wobbles on Autobahn slip-roads. The Cayman is similarly afflicted, but the effect isn't as bad.
First prize must go to the Audi A7. At low speed this car, to my eyes, has one of the most pleasing silhouettes around, long, graceful and elegant. And then above a certain speed the whole thing gets mangled by the most crass, awkward rear aerofoil imaginable. The effect is startling and educational for numbskulls like me who never pay enough attention to the crucial work of design and styling teams. A thin sliver of bodywork rises a few inches from an A7 bootlid and suddenly it looks like a dog with worms, dragging its bottom along the ground.
Are there any genuinely appealing hidden spoilers in sale right now? One that you might, if you were feeling a little flash, choose to keep elevated at low speed - were such a function available. Incidentally, you can do this in a Panamera, which is odd in the Turbo, even with its swanky double-hinged effort, but is plain baffling in lesser models which simply push a piece of glossy plastic four inches skywards.
Later this year all will be saved by the McLaren P1. In full downforce mode the rear wing looks like it'll make then car wheelie above 70mph. I know it's the type of car that can accommodate such drama, but I love the way McLaren has decided to go completely OTT.
If not, they can make a car look a little awkward and in the case of people who leave the spoiler up at low speeds / standstill (Crossfire owner with the lead foot, I'm looking at you), I just assume it's stuck and won't retract.
One could also say that they are at least only a temporary aberration - looking at some of the fixed rear wings of yesteryear makes me laugh as I think they genuinely look comical - Lotus Espirit V8 I'm looking at you...
Makes sense to me - you wouldn't want such a thing dangling between the rear wheels while picking your way along a pot-holed country lane, but on the M11 at 70ishmph, why not?
Pop-up headlights on the other hand are massive ugly airbrakes that stick up in front of you like clowns shoes. But I love them, and there seems to be quite a bit of retro fondness for them now they've gone.
Although nothing that a careful driver wouldn't be able to live without.
Mat777 is a failed aerodynamics student, he should have an interesting view on this.
Dislike the 911 electric job so much i'm trying to find a decent 3.0 wing for it or give up and go ducktail.
I'm not a massive fan of the spoilerless look either. If it's there on the move, i want to look at it when it's parked up too. It serves no purpose, to me at least, to have a flat decklid. Ever.
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