cargurus canada | The all-electric Porsche Mission E Cross Turismo Concept gets driven in the wild for the first time! It's production name will be Taycan Cross Turismo. Tom Voelk gets behind the wheel and drives the twisty roads above Malibu, California. This is a very deep dive into what Porsche has coming in 2019 as it readies it’s first all-electric vehicle. Tom is joined by Porsche’s Dr. Stefan Weckbach and Gana Meissner who share their thoughts on the coming electric vehicle.
Porsche has announced that it will put the Cross Turismo into production as a variant of the upcoming Taycan EV, creating 300 new jobs at Porsche's Zuffenhausen headquarters. This news comes just a day after we saw spy photos of the Taycan Sport Turismo model, which is a wagon sans the Cross Turismo's body cladding and lifted suspension.
The reports of the wagon’s death have been greatly exaggerated, and the Porsche Mission E Cross Turismo concept is the latest proof that the body style is alive and well. Following the path blazed by the raised ride height and plastic-clad wheel arches of its corporate cousin, the Audi A4 Allroad, the Mission E Cross Turismo is an all-electric, off-road-ready wagon that’s nonetheless claimed to be capable of blasting to 60 mph in less than 3.5 seconds and to 124 mph in less than 12 seconds.
That’s right, Porsche is hinting that boxer engines won’t be the only characteristic its vehicles share with Subarus, and the Mission E Cross Turismo reveals the brand is, at the very least, considering an Outback-like variant of its upcoming Mission E sedan. Presumably, such a model will accompany a lower-riding, cladding-free, and non-knobby-tired Sport Turismo wagon version of the Mission E, as well.
Giving credence to the Cross Turismo’s rugged looks is an air suspension setup that can raise the wagon’s ride height by almost two inches, while a set of chunky 275/40R-20 tires wrap around blue five-spoke wheels. An electric motor at each axle provides the all-wheel-drive Cross Turismo with a combined 590 horsepower as well as torque-vectoring abilities.
Charging the Mission E Cross Turismo is accomplished via induction charging or by plugging into the charge port on the right-front fender. Thanks to its 800-volt architecture, the Cross Turismo’s lithium-ion battery pack is capable of adding nearly 200 miles of range in 15 minutes, according to Porsche.
Despite its concept-car status, the Cross Turismo strikes us as decidedly production ready, with details like its LED headlights, exterior side mirrors, door handles, and even some body panels matching the units we’ve seen in spy photos of the Mission E sedan.
Likewise, the interior is a mix of concept-car kit and production-ready pieces. As in the new Cayenne and the current Panamera, the Cross Turismo employs touchscreen technology that is not just limited to the center console. The concept relies on a number of small touchscreens for controlling the windows, seat operation, and air vents, as well as a massive central touchscreen that stretches well into the front passenger’s side of the dashboard.
Meanwhile, a camera in the interior rearview mirror tracks both the driver’s and the front passenger’s eyes and displays pertinent information from the digital gauge cluster and the main infotainment screen in the direction that either individual is looking.
While we wouldn’t count on the eye-tracking technology to debut on the production Mission E, we expect the basic interior design of the Cross Turismo to remain intact. We’d also wager that the production car will rely on old-fashioned knobs and switches for operating the windows, climate control, and seats.
If you’d told us a decade ago that Porsche was considering producing a Subaru Outback–like electric crossover wagon, we would have done a spit take. Now that it’s here in the flesh, though, we have to admit that we’re less averse to the idea than we’d imagined. With the Porsche Mission E sedan expected to go on sale before the end of the decade, we had presumed it’s all but a given that a more practical wagon variant will join the fracas a couple of years later, as it has in the Panamera lineup. Let’s just hope that Porsche sells a Mission E Sport Turismo alongside the more rough-and-tumble Cross Turismo.
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Porsche has announced that it will put the Cross Turismo into production as a variant of the upcoming Taycan EV, creating 300 new jobs at Porsche's Zuffenhausen headquarters. This news comes just a day after we saw spy photos of the Taycan Sport Turismo model, which is a wagon sans the Cross Turismo's body cladding and lifted suspension.
The reports of the wagon’s death have been greatly exaggerated, and the Porsche Mission E Cross Turismo concept is the latest proof that the body style is alive and well. Following the path blazed by the raised ride height and plastic-clad wheel arches of its corporate cousin, the Audi A4 Allroad, the Mission E Cross Turismo is an all-electric, off-road-ready wagon that’s nonetheless claimed to be capable of blasting to 60 mph in less than 3.5 seconds and to 124 mph in less than 12 seconds.
That’s right, Porsche is hinting that boxer engines won’t be the only characteristic its vehicles share with Subarus, and the Mission E Cross Turismo reveals the brand is, at the very least, considering an Outback-like variant of its upcoming Mission E sedan. Presumably, such a model will accompany a lower-riding, cladding-free, and non-knobby-tired Sport Turismo wagon version of the Mission E, as well.
Giving credence to the Cross Turismo’s rugged looks is an air suspension setup that can raise the wagon’s ride height by almost two inches, while a set of chunky 275/40R-20 tires wrap around blue five-spoke wheels. An electric motor at each axle provides the all-wheel-drive Cross Turismo with a combined 590 horsepower as well as torque-vectoring abilities.
Charging the Mission E Cross Turismo is accomplished via induction charging or by plugging into the charge port on the right-front fender. Thanks to its 800-volt architecture, the Cross Turismo’s lithium-ion battery pack is capable of adding nearly 200 miles of range in 15 minutes, according to Porsche.
Despite its concept-car status, the Cross Turismo strikes us as decidedly production ready, with details like its LED headlights, exterior side mirrors, door handles, and even some body panels matching the units we’ve seen in spy photos of the Mission E sedan.
Likewise, the interior is a mix of concept-car kit and production-ready pieces. As in the new Cayenne and the current Panamera, the Cross Turismo employs touchscreen technology that is not just limited to the center console. The concept relies on a number of small touchscreens for controlling the windows, seat operation, and air vents, as well as a massive central touchscreen that stretches well into the front passenger’s side of the dashboard.
Meanwhile, a camera in the interior rearview mirror tracks both the driver’s and the front passenger’s eyes and displays pertinent information from the digital gauge cluster and the main infotainment screen in the direction that either individual is looking.
While we wouldn’t count on the eye-tracking technology to debut on the production Mission E, we expect the basic interior design of the Cross Turismo to remain intact. We’d also wager that the production car will rely on old-fashioned knobs and switches for operating the windows, climate control, and seats.
If you’d told us a decade ago that Porsche was considering producing a Subaru Outback–like electric crossover wagon, we would have done a spit take. Now that it’s here in the flesh, though, we have to admit that we’re less averse to the idea than we’d imagined. With the Porsche Mission E sedan expected to go on sale before the end of the decade, we had presumed it’s all but a given that a more practical wagon variant will join the fracas a couple of years later, as it has in the Panamera lineup. Let’s just hope that Porsche sells a Mission E Sport Turismo alongside the more rough-and-tumble Cross Turismo.
#Porschemissione #porschetaycan
#electricporsche
#cargurus | #carvideos | #car | #videos | car videos
Subscribe for more videos:
https://goo.gl/AgbsC3
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