CAR tech: why Porsche needs hybrids

At the launch of the 997-generation 911 Turbo in 2006,
Porsche faced a daunting future. Anti-car chatter from EU legislators
proposed banning anything that produced more than 241g/km of CO2 and
exceeded 101mph. ‘We’ll have to close if the European Commission decides
that every carmaker must reach [these targets],’ a Porsche exec told
CAR.
Yet Porsche is not a company to take things lying down. It responded with the hybrid Cayenne and Panamera, and with the tech-laden 918 Spyder that’s waiting in the wings. Now there’s another model tasked with keeping the brand’s overall CO2 emissions down: Porsche’s first plug-in, the Panamera S E-Hybrid.
The Porsche Panamera S E-hybrid's petrol-electric heart
Porsche’s 410bhp Panamera S E-Hybrid is powered by the 3.0-litre
supercharged V6 used in the previous Hybrid, but now has 328bhp and a
water-cooled electric motor-generator. The new electric motor-generator
produces 94bhp and a handy 229lb ft torque – 47bhp more than the unit
used in the existing Panamera Hybrid. In EV mode, the E-Hybrid’s capable
of 84mph and a range of 22.4 miles.
The combo meets 2014 EU6 emissions regs, yet is still good for
0-62mph in 5.5-seconds, only 0.4sec behind the Panamera S, and its
167mph top speed is only 11mph down. Where the E-Hybrid wins is
efficiency, of course: official figures of 91mpg and 71g/km of CO2
(helped by the battery charge) are far better than the S’s 32.5mpg and
relatively whopping 204g/km.
Multi-mode electrified driving
There are three driving modes: E-Power, E-Charge and Sport mode,
selectable via the Panamera’s centre console. The E-Hybrid will move off
the mark in electric mode, with E-Power prioritising electric-only
drive unless the driver accelerates hard or battery charge diminishes.
E-Charge mode tops up the battery fully, which is a great way to set
this car up for an indulgent session of Sport Mode, which switches the
Panamera’s character back to ‘full-on Porsche.’
With none of the above selected, the Panamera runs in Hybrid mode,
balancing use of the electric motor against battery charge. There are no
surprises when it comes to driving manners: this is still pure Porsche.
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