BERLIN: Biggest change for 2015 Porsche Cayenne is under the bonnet. The previous Cayenne GTS variations have harboured a fantastically vocal, naturally aspirated 4.8-litre V8, the new one has ditched the ground shaker for a soulless 434bhp 3.6-litre twin-turbo V6.
This is obviously more efficient, and boasts more power (+20bhp) and more torque (+63lb ft), but compared with the previous version which was hardly slow and actually piped sweet V8 music into the hollow cavity of the A-pillars for maximum impact it sounds disappointingly banal. It’s lost an element of its very GTS-ness as a result. You can press the all-guns-blazing button for the (standard) sports exhaust, but all that really does is annoy other motorists.
And trust us, when the 2.1-tonne Porsche SUV test car in question turns up painted Peridot Green, is fitted with the front end from the Turbo and a styling kit, your ability to draw looks like daggers from everyone else on the road is already pretty profound. No matter that the lurid hue does a rather splendid job of complementing the gloss black detailing present on everything from the GTS badges to the quadruple tailpipes.
If that’s the bad news, what’s the good news?
Hard though it is, put the engine issue out of your mind. The main thing, the most important thing, is that the upgraded chassis of the Cayenne GTS will still rearrange your preconceived understanding of physics. With a 20mm drop on the steel springs and a 24mm drop on the optional air suspension, from the delicacy and accuracy of the steering to the astonishing way it controls its bulk, this is an SUV that thinks it’s a sports car.
To get the full effect you are going to have to take a foray into the dangerous territory that is the Porsche options list. This is an alternative reality that somehow convinces you it’s ok to spend £971 on carbonfibre door sill guards (illuminated!) and £534 on a Bluetooth module (let’s not even get into the £2157 Porsche charges for sat-nav, nor the £324 it costs for digital radio a feature that’s now standard on every Volkswagen).
However, it’s also home to Porsche Ceramic Composite Brakes (£5924), Porsche Torque Vectoring Plus (£1011), the self-levelling air suspension package that includes Porsche Active Suspension Management (£2328), and most critically of all Porsche Dynamic Chassis Control (a comparatively reasonable £2186). You want these. Especially the last one.
What’s so special about all the GTS chassis tech, then?
PDCC is an active anti-roll system, and it’s this that really melts your melon. It isn’t new for the 2015 GTS, but the way it keeps the Cayenne flat and level through corners will almost almost convince you that you’re not, in fact, driving an SUV but a more conventional high-performance car that just happens to be floating two feet off the ground. The direction changes and the roll resistance are nothing short of extraordinary.
Add in that sublime steering and the surprisingly decent ride quality no doubt the optional air suspension helps but you can comfortably drive this around in the Sport setting without rupturing any of your own personal critical components and you’ve got such a brilliant all-rounder it could genuinely represent a one-car solution for many a well-heeled enthusiast driver. No, you’ll never entirely escape that weight and vastness, but Porsche has done a bloody good job of disguising it.
Verdict
Still amazing to drive, but we miss the V8. Simples. So if fuel costs aren’t your primary concern, maybe save yourself a few bob on the overall price by tracking down the previous Cayenne GTS whack a private plate on and only the nerdy few will know the difference. Either way, especially with the right options, this is a seriously impressive piece of engineering.




