The 918 was built to prove a point: that Porsche is capable of going toe-to-toe with the best of them in terms of super cars and hybrids supercars at that. What we weren’t expecting, though, is a price tag just north of a million dollars.
The hotly anticipated Porsche 918 Spyder has been unveiled and – not
surprisingly – the halo car goes toe-to-toe with the LaFerrari and
McLaren P1.
The LaFerrari and the McLaren P1 no longer have the hybrid supercar
realm all to themselves. Porsche officially pulls the veils off the 918
Spyder at the Frankfurt Motor Show this week, making it a three-way race
for hybrid halo car dominance.
Porsche makes a convincing case with the 918 Spyder. Constructed of
carbon fiber, the two-seater open-top supercar weighs only 3,692 pounds –
and much of that weight comes from it prodigious powertrain. Porsche
bolted a race-inspired 4.6-liter V8 behind the rear seats that produces
608 horsepower and 390 pound-feet of torque. And that’s just for the gas
engine.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=cBthJmUxKOA
Cleverly, engineers designed many of the car’s accessories to be
powered not by the V8 engine but by electricity. This means neither an
alternator nor an air-conditioning condenser hinders the engine’s power
output. Just as clever is the V8’s exhaust system, which doesn’t exhaust
down or out the back but instead towards the sky, This not only makes
for a very dynamic look from the rear of the car but also keeps the
onboard lithium-ion battery packs from being overheated.
The 918 Spyder has two more power sources besides the V8: a
154-horsepower electric motor also turns the rear axle while a
127-horsepower electric motor spins the front wheels. This takes total
system power output to an impressive 887 horses and 590 lb-ft of torque.
With the V8 and both electric units spinning, 918 Spyder will do 0-62
mph in 2.8 seconds and 0-124 in 7.9 seconds. Which, ironically enough,
is actually faster than your soul can leave your body.
Porsche gave its latest halo car four drive modes: the standard
E-Power, which provides an electric-only range of up to 18 miles at
speeds up to 93(!) mph; Hybrid mode, which works to give the driver the
most efficient power delivery (i.e. it zaps power and gas) and provides
up to 85 mpg; Race Hybrid, which ramps up gear ratios, spins the
electric motors at full tilt while throttling up the V8; and lastly Hot
Lap, which puts all the ponies to the pavement in true ‘melt the polar
caps, baby; we’re going for speed’ style.
Just like the Audi nanuk quattro concept, the 918 features four-wheel
steering that, according to Leftlane News, is the equivalent of adding
50 horsepower or removing 220 pounds from the car while on the track.
The Porsche 918 Spyder, however, is not cheap. The base unit will run
around $1,030,000. If that weren’t enough, you can spec the Porsche
halo car with a $95,000 “Weissach Package” that drops curb weight down
to 3,615 pounds and opens up the paint color options to several historic
Porsche racing-inspires hues and adds – on the interior – six-point
safety harnesses along with Alcantara upholstery.
Remember, this car wasn’t built to be a big seller. It was built to
prove a point: that Porsche is capable of going toe-to-toe with the best
of them in terms of super cars
and hybrids supercars at that. The best bit for us non-billionaires is
that most of the technologies that debuted under the skin of the Spyder
will eventually trickle down to lower-range Porsches in the years to
come.
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