With a front-mounted, all-alloy, overhead cam V8 and rear-mounted transaxle,
the 928 had ample power, perfect 50/50 weight distribution and the thunderous
soundtrack of a muscle car, all wrapped in a beautiful, unadorned body penned
by Wolfgang Möbius—its exposed, flush-fitting headlights popping up to expose bullet-shaped
fairings when turned on among our all-time favorites. Its futuristic interior was incredibly
well appointed, leather covering most surfaces, including the dash and headliner
in many examples. With all the electronic and power equipment one would
expect of a high-end luxury sedan, Porsche’s new coupe was a wonderful place to spend time,
regardless if you had first-gear hairpins or continent-crushing high-speed cruising on the mind
—it really was effortlessly capable of either.
Later versions offered significantly more power by way of increased displacement and more valves,
culminating in 5.4 liters, four per cylinder, and 345 HP in the final GTS version from 1991,
which was good for 170+ MPH and low five second 0-60 times. Though far from a flop
with some 60,000 built, the 928 was never successful enough to replace the 911, either.
If it weren’t for a seven-foot timing belt and other ridiculously indulgent engineering touches,
the V8 cruiser might’ve actually been somewhat reliable, thus avoiding the reputation
it later gained for catastrophic engine failures. If you’ve ever wondered why you can pick up
a once $100k example for less than the cost of a down payment on a new Kia, wonder no more.
So here we are in 2013, the Carrera still with us and selling in greater numbers than ever before,
and the newly-released 991 continuing the rear-engined bloodline with honor and distinction,
with no less than 15 planned versions on the way—hard to believe that Porsche once thought
the 911 had reached a developmental peak, yet another reason the 928 was green-lighted.
Every time I hear a GT3 RS wound out through the gears I think back to that NBA point
guard-length rubber belt, and I thank God for making the complexity-loving engineers
who developed the 928’s engine—cheers to you, guys, and to your spectacular reliability failures.
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