EV News

Final testing of all-electric Taycan: “It drives like a true Porsche”

Published by
Bridie Schmidt

The all-electric Porsche Taycan has entered it final stage of testing, according to the luxury sportscar maker which has released more images of its first sportscar with pure electric drivetrain.

Due to commence production later this year, the Taycan is undergoing final testing procedures in a variety of environments such as in the icy climes just south of the Arctic Circle, in the searing heat of Dubai and in rugged South Africa.

The tests, says Stefan Weckbach who is in charge of developing the electric model range, so is not entirely independent, show that the “Taycan is going to be a true Porsche”.

In Scandinavia, the Taycan’s ability to handle the harsh driving conditions of ice and snow is being tested – as well as factors such as temperature control of the drivetrain and the charging ability of the battery.

In Dubai, it is the extreme heat demands on battery charging that is being tested, as well as “endurance runs”, while in South Africa Porsche is testing the car’s performance.

Source: Porsche
Source: Porsche
Source: Porsche

“Before the Taycan is launched on the market at the end of the year, we will have covered approximately six million kilometres across the globe,” says Weckbach. “We are already very happy with the current status of the vehicles.”

In an in-house interview last August, he said:

“The Taycan drives like a Porsche, looks like a Porsche, and feels like a Porsche,” Weckbach said.

“It just happens to have a different type of drive. Even an electric sports car can be puristic and highly emotional. We don’t consider that a contradiction.

With its advanced 800-volt charging system that can allow ultra fast charging at 350kW, the vehicle can add 100km to its driving range in as little as 4 minutes.

Porsche has definitely put the electric sportscar through its paces – out of its 6 million total kilometres, 2 million of these have been during endurance runs.

When it is released on the market in September 2019, there are already 20,000 buyers who have expressed serious interest in the vehicle, the carmaker says.

Expected to arrive on the Australian market in mid-2020, it is the production version of the Mission-E which was on show at Sydney’s Barangaroo in October last year.

Porsche has not yet announced a price for the Porsche Taycan either here or overseas, but with a purported 500km driving range under the NEDC cycle, it will likely have around 405km of real world driving range.

Recent Posts

Australia’s EV industry has a problem. It is not selling enough cars

The EV industry is not working to create new consumers, it is not working to…

May 6, 2025

Volkswagen expands electric SUV lineup in Australia with ID.5 Pro and ID.4 GTX

Volkswagen has unveiled pricing for an expanded electric vehicle lineup, with the ID.5 Pro and…

May 6, 2025

Tesla sales continue plunge across Europe as April sales plummet

Tesla sales slump again in April, falling more than 80 per cent in Sweden and…

May 5, 2025

EVs reach 97 pct market share in Norway, Model Y tops sales but Tesla share falls

Norway reaches 97 per cent EV sales in April, as plug in hybrid numbers crash…

May 5, 2025

EV sales remain weak in April as Tesla plunges and BYD takes the lead

April EV sales remain weak, as Tesla plunges again and the Model Y and Model…

May 5, 2025

BYD sells tens of thousands of its fast-charging EVs in first month

BYD's first two models featuring 1,000 kW charging went on sale in April, and are…

May 5, 2025