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 1996 Porsche 911 Review
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Introduction | Walkaround | Interior | Driving Impressions | Summary & Specifications

 Introduction

Sports cars do not lend themselves to the kind of rational evaluation found elsewhere

on these pages. Every virtue most car-buyers hold dear--low price, fuel economy,

spacious accommodations or minimal maintenance cost--is conspicuously absent from the

attribute lists of these high-performance machines.

The fact of the matter is that sports cars are not designed to appeal to consumers.

Rather, they are directed at driving enthusiasts, people who choose transportation

based on input from their hearts, not minds. The motivations here can seldom be

justified, and really don't need to be. Every sports car on the road represents a

victory of want over need.

Porsche owners--specifically, Porsche 911 owners--are at the peak of this small but

intense class of customers. They are fiercely loyal, usually vocal about their reasons

for purchase and are, almost without exception, as much in love with their cars as a

car owner can be.

Such partisanship is understandable. Porsche has experimented with a variety of engine

layouts and body designs over the years, but at the core of its business the 911

series, first introduced in late 1964, stands alone.

The 911's preeminence is now fact as much as fable. All current Porsches are 911

derivatives, whether entry-level 911 Carrera coupe, Carrera Targa (with its innovative

sliding glass roof panel), flip-top Cabriolet, all-wheel drive Carrera 4 or 4S, or

overachieving 911 Turbo. Over a 32-year production span, they have been improved in

countless ways, to the point where they blend real-world comfort with performance that

can only be exploited to the maximum on a race track.

Logically, the 911s have a host of competitors. The Acura NSX, Chevrolet Corvette,

Dodge Viper, Mazda RX-7, Toyota Supra Turbo and Nissan 300ZX Turbo are all ultra-high

performance machines, and most are less expensive.

But this is not an arena where comparison shopping has much meaning. If you're in the

market for one of these cars, your heart will tell you which dealer to visit.

Our test car was the top-of-the-line 911 Turbo, one of the true rocket sleds of

sportscardom.


 Other Porsche Reviews
2008 Porsche Cayenne Review
2008 Porsche 911 Review
2007 Porsche Boxster Review
2007 Porsche Cayman Review
2007 Porsche 911 Review
2006 Porsche Boxster Review
2006 Porsche 911 Review
2006 Porsche Cayenne Review
2005 Porsche 911 Review
2005 Porsche Cayenne Review
2005 Porsche Boxster Review
2004 Porsche 911 Review
2004 Porsche Cayenne Review
2004 Porsche Boxster Review
2003 Porsche 911 Review
2000 Porsche Boxster Review
2000 Porsche 911 Review
1998 Porsche Boxster Review
1996 Porsche 911 Review
1995 Porsche 911 Review

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