Skip advert
Advertisement

New Porsche 911 Turbo Cabriolet 2016 review

New drop-top is one of the fastest yet, but the Porsche 911 Turbo Cabriolet's outright speed compromises the fun factor

Overall Auto Express Rating

3.0 out of 5

Find your Porsche 911
Offers from our trusted partners on this car and its predecessors...
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Customers got an average £1000 more vs part exchange quotes
Advertisement

With a sizeable premium over the already fabulous drop-top 911 Carrera S, it’s hard to recommend the Turbo Cabriolet unless you’re blinded by the raw performance figures. Buy this car and you’ll certainly be getting one of the fastest open-top 911s ever. But you definitely won’t be buying the best. Having said that, it is astonishingly usable day-to-day considering the performance available.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The vast majority of the latest Porsche 911 range is now turbocharged – but that doesn’t mean there’s no longer room for extreme blown performance at the top of the line-up. Enter the latest 911 Turbo, driven here in Cabriolet form, which packs a mighty punch to deliver supercar acceleration alongside classic Porsche usability.

At least, that’s the theory. The numbers are pretty impressive; the Turbo’s revised 3.8-litre twin-turbocharged six-cylinder engine now produces 532bhp and 710Nm, enough to get from 0-62mph in just 3.1 seconds, and on to a top speed of 198mph.

Best convertible cars

The good but frankly unsurprising news is that the 911 Turbo Cabriolet is mind-bogglingly fast. It is hard to think of any car, let alone convertible, that would be as quick from point to point, thanks to the rapid-shifting seven-speed transmission, four-wheel drive and those enormous reserves of power and torque. It’s a surprisingly refined cruiser, too – particularly if you stick the adjustable dampers and powertrain into their ‘Normal’ modes to soften the ride and calm down the exhaust note.

Porsche says it has introduced new technology to reduce turbo lag and sure enough, if you keep the revs spinning there simply isn’t much that could keep up with the Turbo Cabriolet. But if you’re in a higher gear – even third will do – and in manual mode, you’ll still notice a delay between stabbing the throttle and the trademark shove in the kidneys. It’s a bit like watching a boxer deliver a knockout punch, but in slow motion.

Best sports cars

Where the Turbo really falls down is in character; it’s all about that adrenaline rush of acceleration – which is fine on a test track, but less useful on the public road. There’s none of the aural character that you get with even the turbocharged Carreras; with every last piece of the engine set-up totally devoted to performance, you get an assortment of whistles, chirps and whooshes that drown out six cylinders.

Yes, the roadholding from the four-wheel-drive chassis set-up is impressive – even more so if you flick the dampers into Sport mode – but it’s hard to play with a Turbo, because you need to be going so quickly to go sideways, the moment it does break loose, there’s little chance of getting it back.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Editor-at-large

John started journalism reporting on motorsport – specifically rallying, which he had followed avidly since he was a boy. After a stint as editor of weekly motorsport bible Autosport, he moved across to testing road cars. He’s now been reviewing cars and writing news stories about them for almost 20 years.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Used electric car sales spike 71% as ex-company cars reach the market in big numbers
Tesla Model 3 - front
News

Used electric car sales spike 71% as ex-company cars reach the market in big numbers

Battery power accounted for 2.1 per cent of used car sales in the first quarter of 2024, with sales up 71 per cent
8 May 2024
MG model blitz: new MG2 and MG ZS to lead brand's assault on the market
MG ZS EV - front
News

MG model blitz: new MG2 and MG ZS to lead brand's assault on the market

A new MG2, plus replacements for the ZS and HS are all expected to arrive by the end of 2025
10 May 2024
New Skoda Octavia facelift kicks off at under £27k and you can order now
Skoda Octavia facelift - front
News

New Skoda Octavia facelift kicks off at under £27k and you can order now

Skoda’s award-winning best-seller is given fresh technology and a more powerful vRS model
9 May 2024