prj
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2025
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- www.mapev.net
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- Taycan CT 4 - 2026
Which variant?Do you happen to have the same chart for a J1.2?
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Which variant?Do you happen to have the same chart for a J1.2?
That was the point of replying with a facepalm to what that bloke had been going on about.A RWD 911 Carrera saves about 45–50 kg compared to a 4 or 4S, mainly because it lacks the front differential and the driveshaft (which runs along the length of the car). That is less than a 3% weight savings, primarily from the front axle, for a car that weighs a little over 1.5 tons. Yet auto blogs are full of endless debates about RWD vs. AWD on a 911, with a large group of people preferring the base Carrera’s handling.
A Taycan RWD saves about 90 kg compared to the AWD version because it lacks a front motor, inverter, and gear. That is about a 4.5% weight savings for a car that weighs a little over 2 tons, coming entirely from the front axle. Why wouldn’t this be a legitimate debate and why should the handling benefits be ignored “because it is already a heavy car”? I don’t understand.
Everybody has their preferences, and maybe 4-5% differences are subtle for some people. But then, many things in the Porsche world are subtle.
The point of replying with a facepalm is because you ran out of arguments, and now you're just throwing out ad hominems and being disrespectful.That was the point of replying with a facepalm to what that bloke had been going on about.
PTV will help keep more speed along a controlled curve, with no rear axis sliding. That's completely different to what we RWD lover wants: bring the weight on the front during braking, turn in and send the power to have a controlled slide.[...]
You know what actually rotates better? The one with the PTV.
Maybe if you live in a completely dry climate the RWD is useful from a performance perspective. Over here when it's wet/snowy half the year the RWD is completely useless, as you can't use even 50% of the power.
Not a big deal on a weekend car you take out when it's sunny out, absolutely a big deal on a daily driver.
[...]
99.9% of those who bought an RWD Taycan did so because it was cheaper and sufficient for their needs.
No, that is not the case at all, even in a slide it rotates the car based on the steering input. It's like trail braking on steroids.PTV will help keep more speed along a controlled curve, with no rear axis sliding.
You should not go drifting on public roads regardless of speed and take that to a track.That's completely different to what we RWD lover wants: bring the weight on the front during braking, turn in and send the power to have a controlled slide.
AWD would need much more speed (thus to be on a track) to do the same.
There is not the question of whether it works or not. Driving a Dacia Spring also works - that's not the point. The question is whether it's slow or not, and it is slow in anything but completely dry weather from the acceleration standpoint when comparing with a 4S.And my RWD Taycan absolutely works perfectly fine on rain and snow, thank you.![]()
You can - the CT has a differently tuned suspension. The better comparison is a ST vs Sedan, as they are identical apart from the rear part.Speaking of weight…..
Can you tell a difference driving the sedan vs cross turismo of the same spec? That’s about 200 lbs, should settle the debate.
The point of replying with a facepalm is because you ran out of arguments, and now you're just throwing out ad hominems and being disrespectful.
You cut out a single sentence completely out of context, and kept arguing with something that was never said. Once pointed out you had nothing else to say.
There is a reason why all the track Porsches are RWD, and that is because it is superior on a track. It does not apply to a daily driven heavy EV, when the RWD variant is significantly down on power.
99.9% of those who bought an RWD Taycan did so because it was cheaper and sufficient for their needs. Comparing that to a 911 is a complete disconnect with reality.

Personally, I'm interested to see the Audi RS e-tron GT Performance - it'd also be interesting to compare it to the equivalent Taycan to see how Audi set things up given their history of front-heavy understeering AWD cars.Which variant?
The Performance is a Turbo S.Personally, I'm interested to see the Audi RS e-tron GT Performance - it'd also be interesting to compare it to the equivalent Taycan to see how Audi set things up given their history of front-heavy understeering AWD cars.
Are you really arguing with an esteemed F1 (yes F1) engineer???The point of replying with a facepalm is because you ran out of arguments, and now you're just throwing out ad hominems and being disrespectful.
You cut out a single sentence completely out of context, and kept arguing with something that was never said. Once pointed out you had nothing else to say.
There is a reason why all the track Porsches are RWD, and that is because it is superior on a track. It does not apply to a daily driven heavy EV, when the RWD variant is significantly down on power.
99.9% of those who bought an RWD Taycan did so because it was cheaper and sufficient for their needs. Comparing that to a 911 is a complete disconnect with reality.
I don't care if he is the pope himself if he can't read. He's arguing with himself, not something that I ever said in context, and after that was pointed out he just doubled down and threw a tantrum.Are you really arguing with an esteemed F1 (yes F1) engineer???
Have some respect please.
In Canyon driving, not full throttle, you can feel the Audis understeer bias compared to the Taycan. Myself with a J1.1 RS Etron GT and another member here with a Quattro that is a track driver said the same.Personally, I'm interested to see the Audi RS e-tron GT Performance - it'd also be interesting to compare it to the equivalent Taycan to see how Audi set things up given their history of front-heavy understeering AWD cars.
Checked J1.2.Personally, I'm interested to see the Audi RS e-tron GT Performance - it'd also be interesting to compare it to the equivalent Taycan to see how Audi set things up given their history of front-heavy understeering AWD cars.