The 463-hp Panamera 4 E-Hybrid and 536-hp 4S E-Hybrid join the 671-hp Turbo E-Hybrid launched last year, and a Turbo S version will also arrive
Remember when hybrid powertrain options were the odd outlier of an automaker's model lineup? It seems like a long time ago now, and it's not just ordinary family car buyers fueling the PHEV trend. Porsche buyers love the Panamera's available hybrid powertrains so much that in some markets the sedan's sales are 100 percent electric.
Therefore, there will be at least four hybrid models in Porsche's third generation Panamera series. We were introduced to the 348 hp (353 PS) non-hybrid Panamera and Panamera 4, as well as the 671 hp (680 PS) Turbo E-Hybrid, when Porsche introduced the revised sedan last November, and now it's fleshing out the lineup with the Panamera 4 E. Hybrid and Panamera 4S E-Hybrid. What about the fourth add-on option? Here's the upcoming Turbo S E-Hybrid.
Both of the new PHEVs are powered by the same base 2.9-liter V6, but the ICE package adds 300 hp (304 PS) to the base E-Hybrid's 463 hp (470 PS) total system output and 479 lb-ft (650 PS). ) contributes. Nm) of torque, the 4S E-Hybrid's V6 chips 348 hp (354 PS), for a total of 536 hp (544 PS) and 553 lb-ft (750 Nm).
Comparing these stats with previous year's equivalent models reveals that the E-Hybrid gains 8 hp (8 PS), but the S E-Hybrid's power output drops by 16 hp (16 PS). Yield? Reaching a speed of 280 km/h, the E-Hybrid reaches 97 km/h in 3.9 seconds; this is an improvement of 0.3 seconds; The S E-Hybrid, which reaches a speed of 290 km/h, needs 3.5 seconds, which has not changed.
Not bad, but the Turbo E-Hybrid will get you there in about 3.0 seconds, and we can expect the Turbo S E-Hybrid to double that when it arrives with 729 hp (740 PS), probably later this year. V8 powered from the new Cayenne.
The electric motor, hidden inside the Panamera's PDK transmission, produces 187 hp (190 PS) this time, compared to 134 hp (136 PS) for the engine of older PHEVs. And each of the new hybrids has the same 25.9 kWh (gross) battery; This is 45 percent larger than the 17.9 kWh unit fitted to the old car. Porsche hasn't specified any range figures, but with this kind of battery expansion program the numbers will be much better than before.
That wouldn't be a stretch: The old E-Hybrid and S E-Hybrid both had an EPA range estimate of just 19 miles (31 km). Larger batteries take longer to charge, of course, but Porsche has fitted an 11kW onboard charger (up from 7kW) to speed things up. But speed is relative. It still takes 2.5 hours to charge the battery.
Source: https://www.carscoops.com/2024/02/porsche-adds-two-more-e-hybrid-powertrains-to-facelifted-panamera-lineup-and-one-has-lost-some-horses/