Both of them.
They can keep the standard 911, for tradition you know, but I actually preferred the 996 to the 997 and the 964 to the 993.
Obviously I stil think the original 911 is the best looking.
They could have made the Cayene IF it was really Dakar related and IF they were to enter rally raids again. IIRC they never had a remarkable carrier in racing yacht so no point in selling one.
The Panamera is just another boat. I honestly don't care how they handle as basically everything this days from a major company handles well and up to its prerogatives. Aston Martin did the huge mistake of passing pre production and testing DBS' to journos because the production cars weren't ready yet. Big mistake, and now people still think the DBS is a nanny coupe.
Ferrari did the same mistake with the 599, except that the car was indeed fast but horribly assembled and finished, carrying on the usual belief that Ferraris are among the worst assembled cars on the interior.
BTW, there used to be more sporty 911s during the 993 generation than now I think, and that GT2 was really insane.
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KFL Racing Enterprises - Kicking your ass since 2008
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Turbo, Turbo Cab, Turbo S, RS, GT2, and a Speedster.
Everything that I've read says that the 997 GT2 is badass, but it is missing the point when compared to the 993... which is mega badass.
The idea being how the 997 GT2 isn't as racing focused as the 993 was.
What I don't understand is why Porsche didn't just make a 997 GT2 which is just as hardcore as the orginal? I mean, so what if they don't race GT2's anymore; they can still build a new one as if they intended to. Porsche was always about racing and motorsports, why not keep it that way?
IIRC there were more variants of the RS model, whatever.
The new GT2 may be fast, but it's just an uglier Turbo to look at, with the Turbo surely not being pretty in first place, and mostly, it's uglier without a point. At least the 996 GT2 was somehow good looking, or even better looking than the base 996, while also being faster if compared to what was available at the time, while the 997 GT2 is surely fast, but not that fast.
The 993 GT2 was just insane, something like a poor man F40.
I'd expect a modern GT2 being similar to a GT3 RS, just extremer, while it just seems to be an officially tuned Turbo.
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Chaps let's not argue about Porsche's sportscars, you may like them or not, but they are perfectly ok, even current ones. And the 993 is the best 911 together with the original.
It's the four door Porsches that are the problem.
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
If only the PanAm was 2-300 kg lighter, had a decent look and a less gimmick interior I could live with it. If only the Cayenne was a road going Bowler Nemesis I could live with it. If only my grandpa had wheels I'd have been a car, if he had wings, I'd have been a freaking plane.
Italian non senses.
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Don't know, I always perceived Porsche as a generalist sporty brand, so once they entered Dakar one time, I could see something like that coming.
The PanAm could have a the less embarrassing way to enlarge the portfolio without using a SUV, but they managed to screw that too.
I'm fine with the Rapide, not only because I like it.
Maybe they should have made it different looking and sell it as a Lagonda, but it was too early, half people wouldn't even recognize the name. It's just a Vanquish 2+2, just with an easier access to the rear seats this time.
Considering I think AM and Maserati are pretty similar, only divided by about 100.000 € per car, it makes a lot of sense.
and the Veyron? who?
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I thought we already cleared that the Cygnet is something they just need to do, like paying taxes or crash test on cars like the One-77.
It's a rather harmless thing though, only AM customers will have the possibility to buy it, and the point is having it in the line-up, they could even manage to sell 10 of them but it would be enough if it is meant to be a production car.
And I still think it would be perfect for a V8 swap, with the front seats moved back, eliminating the rear seats and straight pipes. for the lulz.
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