You’ve heard none of the hue and cry that accompanied the launch of the Cayenne. No Chicken Little “Porsche’s sky if falling” doomsday prophecies lamenting the diluting of the storied brand. Nor even the questioning of marketability that accompanies every model that threatens to stretch any brand. Indeed, the anoraks that decried the arrival of Porsche’s first SUV back in 2000 have uttered not a solitary peep at the arrival of this, Stuttgart’s second sports utility vehicle.
That’s, of course, because the Cayenne has been successful beyond even Porsche’s wildest dreams (the company sold more than 77,000 in 2012 alone), responsible — along with the four-door Panamera — not just for the survival of the brand but the kind of profitability that has allowed the company to expand its much-ballyhooed lineup of sports cars. Purists might blanch at the thought, but there is a 918 Spyder because Porsche has made so much money selling Cayennes. Ditto for seemingly uncountable variations of the 911 and something as relatively low on the sales volume chart as the Cayman. Those cars might never have seen the light of day if the people enthusiasts deride as dilettantes hadn’t been parking Cayennes in their garages in record numbers. So, don’t expect much controversy to accompany the introduction of Porsche’s latest profit-generating “truck”, the Macan.
Certainly, the naysayers will find little to complain about the Macan’s execution. Oh, there might be tut-tutting that it’s based on Audi’s Q5 — true but with substantial alterations — or that it might eventually be available with diesel and/or even four-cylinder engines. But, as delivered, the Macan Turbo is, as befits anything wearing the Porsche crest, the most sporting of SUVs.
The Turbo — a confusing moniker since both models are, in fact, powered by turbocharged V6s; a 3.0-litre for the S, a 3.6 for the Turbo — boasts a class-leading 400 horsepower (the S but 60-hp less) and can accelerate to 100 kilometres an hour in less than five seconds (the S is about half a tick behind). And while that’s slower than anything else wearing a Turbo badge in Porsche’s lineup, lack of power will never be a Macan complaint.
One thing that is surprising, however, is that those 400 horses are not the important number on the spec sheet. The Turbo boasts 406 of those foot-pound things and they’re available at such a low 1,350 rpm that one seldom sees the tachometer swing past 3,000 rpm in the course of everyday driving. Indeed, the seven-speed PDK consistently short shifts keeping the V6 in the lower echelons of its rev range; one really has to be deep in the throttle before you’ll get any serious engine revving. And, if there’s any disappointment at all to the Turbo’s performance, it’s that the twin-turbo’ed V6′s low-rpm response is so impressive down low that you expect it to build to an almost 918 crescendo at higher rpm when, it fact, it goes flat above about 5,000 rpm. Nonetheless, 4.8 seconds to 100 klicks — 4.6 with the Sports Chrono package — is amazing stuff for something that portends to go off-road.
Keeping the revs low does have positive benefits, though. One presumes it helps fuel economy, though the Macan Turbo’s 14.2 litres per 100 km in the city and 10.1 highway figures seem strikingly consumptive, that highway figure, for instance, worse than what Porsche claims for the Cayenne Turbo, two pistons richer and some 325 kilograms heavier. It is important to remember, though, that the Macan is using Natural Resources Canada’s new, more stringent five-cycle testing regimen so direct comparisons are not yet possible.
Nonetheless, keeping the revs down at least reduces the thrashiness typical of a V6 and, indeed, the Macan’s powertrain may be more impressive for its sophistication than its performance.
The same impressing-beyond-its-humble-origins applies to the chassis. Yes, the 2,807-millimetre wheelbase is essentially the same as the Q5′s and, yes, the various suspension links and geometry are also identical (Porsche says that they were fully prepared to change it all, but that Audi did such a good job that they left well enough alone), but pretty much everything else has been Porschified. Dampers and spring rates are notably firmer, the tires are bigger and wider and the steering ratio is noticeably quicker. Porsche also incorporated its own electronically-controlled all-wheel-drive system that offers, says the company, more variation in torque splits than the quattro system’s mechanical diff. Whatever the case, the Macan features a decidedly rearward torque split, a trait emphasized when it is equipped with the company’s PTV torque-vectoring system (a $1,700 option). Not having a racetrack at my disposal, I did not test the efficacy of this last, but I can say that the overall result is a taut ride with precious little body roll and turn-in that is almost sports-car-like. Indeed, if there’s a reason to opt for the Macan’s comparatively small cargo space (17.6 cubic feet which is barely bigger than some sedans), it is its lithe, athletic steering. A few will complain that the steering is too heavy, but that extra effort results in steering feel uncommon in the SUV ranks.
The Macan’s cabin will come as no surprise to anyone who has sat inside a recent Porsche. The centre console is dominated by the performance modifying buttonry — suspension, traction control, etc. — that surrounds the gear lever. The upper console has all the multimedia gadgetry and there’s more to be had on the steering wheel. Truth be told, it’s all just a little too busy for my liking. Despite my ambivalence towards the multimedia controllers that proliferate these days, I found myself wishing some of this “noise” were programmed into the central computer, trotted out for the one or two times a month that one might access the sports suspension button or decide to pair yet another phone.
Another departure from my normal road tests will be to comment on the Macan’s exterior styling. Normally, since beauty is so much in the eye of the beholder, I would let the accompanying pictures speak their thousand words. But I find the Macan so fetching — and not just for an SUV — that I feel obliged to comment. Depending on your viewpoint, it can be seen as the Cayenne distilled — it looks lithe while the Cayenne always seems a little football-lineman-gone-to-seed to me — or perhaps a big Boxster wagon. I see a little of BMW’s odd little M Coupe in the Macan, slightly boated yes, but pugnaciously sporty nonetheless.
Porsche’s pricing is positively off-the-wall
If free market capitalism teaches us anything, it is that nothing has an “intrinsic” value; any product — from a lowly can of fizzy pop to the most expensive of Italian supercars — is only worth what the market will bear. And bear is something the market has chosen to do with all Porsche products, all the company’s cars demanding a premium for their Teutonic engineering. Nonetheless, I have to say that I found the Macan Turbo’s pricing especially egregious.