Sporty compression-ignition engine from
Zuffenhausen – reaction to changed boundary parameters
Premiere
at Porsche: Cayenne with diesel engine
The
Executive Board at Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Stuttgart, has
given the go-ahead: from February 2009, the sports car manufacturer
will offer a Cayenne with a diesel engine and thus extend its range of
drives for the sporty all-terrain vehicle further, once again. This
decision was taken in response to changed legal regulations especially
in European markets, resulting in tax incentives for vehicles with
diesel engines. Furthermore, Porsche's stake in the Volkswagen Group,
the world’s largest manufacturer of modern diesel engines for passenger
cars, has opened up new opportunities to utilise diesel technology.
Porsche will equip the Cayenne with a three-litre V6 turbo diesel
engine with 240 hp (176 kW) supplied by Audi AG, a subsidiary of the VW
Group. The average consumption of the Cayenne Diesel is 9.3 litres per
100 kilometres, with CO2 at 244 grams per kilometre.
The spontaneous
throttle response and the high torque characteristics of this diesel
engine deliver the required performance levels for a sporty all-terrain
vehicle such as the Cayenne. The substantial torque of a maximum of 550
Newton metres complements the sporty chassis dynamics and provides a
high degree of control to offer driving enjoyment that is typical of
Porsche.
In response to customer demand, the new Cayenne model will initially be
offered in Europe. Preparations for market introduction in other
countries are underway.
The Porsche
Executive Board is confident that it will maintain the long
term market success of the Cayenne series in the long term with the
low-consumption V6 turbo diesel. In the last financial year 2007/08,
45,478 units of this series (which currently incorporates five
different models) were sold - more than ever before in a financial
year.
With the introduction of the Cayenne Diesel, Porsche is consistently
continuing its commitment to reduce fuel consumption. As early as
Spring 2007, the sports car manufacturer had equipped the new
generation of the Cayenne series with engines with petrol direct
injection that consume up to 15 percent less fuel in real-world driving
conditions. Since the summer of 2008, Porsche has also offered the most
recent generation of the 911 series with direct-injection petrol
engines. The sports car manufacturer is also working on another Cayenne
variant with hybrid drive that will consume less than nine litres of
fuel per 100 kilometres and will be launched onto the market at the end
of the decade.
The new Cayenne with diesel drive will be available from dealers from
February 2009 onwards. Equipped with the proven Tiptronic-S automatic
gearbox as standard, the Euro base price will be EUR 47,250. In
Germany, the Cayenne with diesel engine including 19 percent VAT and
country-specific equipment costs EUR 56,436.

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