Recent Updates

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

Cybertruck hits the UK: Can EV beast win over London's car fans?

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

"No excess": This 'EV Stratos' shows China cares about enthusiasts

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

Illegal mileage blockers could be used to duck pay-per-mile EV tax

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

'SBTi': Four letters that have got every car company rattled

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

Hot Panda inbound as Abarth plots return to petrol power

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

MG mulls positioning shift as European production to lift prices

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

Kia EV9 GT

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

Leapmotor A05 coming as cut-price Volkswagen ID 3 rival

 

03/16/2026 12:00 PM

Volkswagen ID Cross prototype review

 

03/13/2026 12:00 PM

Torque vs tread - do EVs tear through tyres faster?

<<    1   2   3   4   5   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 7763   Next >
Porsche 911 Cabriolet
Friday, Mar 13, 2026 12:00 PM
Porsche 911 GTS Cabriolet review 2026 001 The 911 coupe gets plenty of attention so here we focus on the cab – in 534bhp, four-wheel drive GTS form Not often, in the realm of full Autocar road tests, do we focus our attention on the convertible version of a performance car. On the weighbridge these derivatives are invariably heavier, against the clock they are guaranteed to be slower and in subjective handling terms they will almost always be less rewarding.In short, it’s better to test the coupé if you want to know what a car is really capable of. This explains why it has been 12 years since we last tested a convertible Porsche 911, and even that is stretching the reality of the matter, because that 2014-model-year test car was not even a Cabriolet but a Targa.So why now focus our attention on the new 911 Carrera 4 GTS Cabriolet? First, the popular Cabriolet makes up a significant proportion of annual 911 sales worldwide, so it demands attention from, ahem, a public interest standpoint. Also, we have yet to affix our VBox telemetry gear to any four-wheel-drive variant of the eighth-generation 911, which is another oversight given the popularity of the format in the UK.Third, we are curious to see what the humble 911 Carrera is like when shorn of its roof and taken to extremes of performance and grip. Convertible 911s today are not like those of the 1980s and 1990s, and the compromises made in comparison to the coupé have shrunk over the years. Is it now the case that you can buy the 911 Cabriolet safe in the knowledge that there are no discernible dynamic drawbacks when you want to enjoy a great stretch of road? Even if that car has comfortably more than 500bhp and also the traction to deploy it?