Avantgarde
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Eugene
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2022
- Threads
- 8
- Messages
- 368
- Reaction score
- 466
- Location
- Ann Arbor, MI
- Vehicles
- 22' Taycan RWD PB+, 21' X5 Xdrive45e, 09' Cayman
If this is difficult to conceptualize, here is another way to think: PB and PB+ started the race at the same time, at 11.5 seconds, PB is travelling at 99 mph, PB+ at that point travelling at 102 mph but is physically behind PB, while approaching & making up the distance it lost in the first meters of the race. It will take another ~2 seconds for PB+ to physically catch (and pass) the PB. Actually as I think about this as a RWD PB+ owner who also tested a RWD PB I totally feel this. I did think 0-30 (slow) to 30-60 (fast) anomaly people are talking about was a lot more pronounced in the PB+ than PB. Data proves why. I still prefer the PB+ as higher speed elasticity is more important for my driving habits.I've been thinking about this quite a bit (the 0-60, 1/4 mile and 0-99 anomaly you raise between PB and PB+)and I found the answer! and it is not an anomaly at all! Mind you it is not an intuitive one at first sight so listen to this carefully please: 1- We all know higher powered but heavier PB+ will increasingly have more benefit as speed builds up. This is by the simple fact that the at lower speeds horsepower is almost entirely fighting against the weight, as speed builds up wheel and air friction go up exponentially so the engine is now fighting a mix of weight and friction. Since friction is constant between PB and PB+ the importance of weight goes down with speed and higher HP trumps. 2- Data supports this directional relationship, for the 0-124 mph run PB+ is 1.1 seconds faster than PB, the difference falls to 0.5 for the 0-99 mph run and finally falls to zero seconds for the 0-60 mph run. But what does that tell you? If you were to extrapolate the same logic you'd see PB is faster than PB+ 0 to 30 mph ! Porsche does not reveal this data but it has to be the case. 0-30 mph PB will be faster and 30-60 mph PB+ would be faster and things would even out at 60 mph. Now lets hold this thought as it will be relevant 3- When you look at the 1/4 mile time you automatically assume that 1/4 mile test is equivalent to something like a 0-110 mph test (based in interpolation between 0-99 and 0-124 times) except IT IS NOT! it is a DISTANCE time not time to a specific speed 4- So looking at the same 13.7 sec 1/4 mile times you automatically assume PB and PB+ would have the same speed when they hit the 1/4 mile, but they won't! In reality based on the acceleration profile even though they hit the distance mark at the same time PB+ will carry a higher speed at that point. BUT HOW? 5- We established that 0-30 PB will have to be faster which means when they start a standing race at second 2 or so, PB will have travelled slightly farther. between 30-60 mph PB+ will close the SPEED GAP (careful though not the distance GAP yet) and by 5.1 seconds, both vehicles will be travelling at the same speed although at that point PB will still maintain the initial DISTANCE GAP it gained in the first 0-30. This is normal because during the first 5.1 seconds of the race PB+ never travelled at a faster speed than the PB. Starting from 60 mph PB+ will start closing the distance GAP as it will build speed quicker than the PB somewhere around 110 miles of speed it will have fully closed the GAP but at that moment PB+ will be travelling at a higher speed than PB (well it has to, as that is the only way to close the GAP!) 6- Bottom line it is perfectly normal for PB+ to have faster 0-99 mph time but still hit 1/4 mile at around the same time with PB. This dynamic will be true in almost all cases where you compare a heavier vehicle with more power with a lighter vehicle with less power with a matching 0-60 time. Even though they have the same 0-60 time Lighter vehicle's speed curve will be more logaritmic (steep first with sharp decline in speed) vs the heavier car. Which means the even with the same 0-60 times, the speeds at which heavier car catches the lighter car will be at a point higher than 60 mph. YES! I was so excited to discover this, hope it makes sense to you!
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