There’s something missing on the centre console of this Porsche 718. It takes a few moments for me to twig, but now I have I can’t stop the smile from spreading broadly across my face. It doesn’t matter how hard you look for it, you won’t find a Sport button on the new Cayman GT4. Nor a mode switch on the steering wheel, a Manettino-style device or anything of their ilk. So while I sincerely hope you do go on to read the rest of this story, and with a bit of luck maybe derive some enjoyment from it too, if you don’t, and you need a five-second summation of this car’s character – and why it’s a thoroughly essential Evo machine – you could do a lot worse than remembering the above small observation.
Replacing the 981 Cayman GT4 was always going to be a task fraught with potential controversy. Our 2015 eCoty winner, it’s a car that slew even such giants as the 991.1 GT3 RS and Ferrari 488 GTB that breezed every group test it was entered into and, back in 2015, felt like the right car at the right time: an antidote to all the increasing power outputs, turbocharged engines, dual-clutch ’boxes and number chasing performance cars preoccupied with breaking records but strangely disconnected from what real enthusiasts actually wanted from their cars – and could actually use. No wonder everybody wanted one.
Therein, of course, lay the problem: there weren’t enough to go around, and pretty soon a speculator’s market turned what was meant to be a Motorsport department car for the common man (relatively speaking!) into another brilliant Porsche tantalizingly out of reach. While many cried foul, Porsche’s response was that it simply underestimated demand. This time the promise is that everyone who wants one should be able to buy one.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2019-Ausgabe von evo India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2019-Ausgabe von evo India.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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FAST STEAD
This Skoda Octavia RS 230 is fast enough to blow your mind but not its engine
Ford Fusion
Practical, great engine and dynamics, but weird styling ensured buyers stayed well away
Mahindra Bolero Neo
Armed with an iconic badge, a fresh face and a mechanically locking differential, the Bolero Neo could just be the compact SUV you’ve been looking for
RISING FROM THE ASHES
The third generation Suzuki Hayabusa is one of the fastest production motorcycles in the world, and a bike that truly deserves to be ridden flat out at the High Speed Track at NATRAX
BIJOY KUMAR Y
Bijoy is quite looking forward to what the recent space launches could mean
DOA: HSV HRT 427
This racing-inspired 7-litre Holden Monaro garnered more than enough interest for its limited production run to sell out. But sadly the sums didn’t add up
Mini Cooper S Convertible
Mini gives the Convertible a more modern front end, more technology on the inside and a very bright paint scheme
VW Taigun GT
Good news! With two GT variants, Volkswagen are set to make the 1.5 TSI motor even more accessible to us enthusiasts
THE DOCTOR CHECKS OUT
As Rossi decides to hang up his boots after 26 seasons, we take a look back at his journey through MotoGP
“IF THE RATING IS DONE, NATRAX COULD BE ONE OF THE TOP THREE PROVING GROUNDS IN THE WORLD”
Speaking to Dr N Karuppaiah, additional director and centre head, NATRAX