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Model Calendar year introduced Current model Vehicle description Introduction Update/facelift 718 BOXSTER/CAYMAN: 718: 1996 2016 () Rear mid-engine, rear-wheel drive roadster (Boxster) and fastback coupe (Cayman).
Porsche Experimental Prototype (PEP) test vehicle 2708: 1985–1990: CART/Indy series car used by the March team 2708/80: 1985–1990: 9M0 engine, 2.65-liter turbocharged V 8 engine for Type 2708 2746 Study for a Porsche 928 with aluminum body 2747: 1988: Proposed PFF (Porsche Vehicle Family) 2756 Study for a Porsche 928 with aluminum body 2758 ...
This was a 4-cylinder version of the 911 in the same manner as the 912 that had last been produced in 1969. It used the I-series chassis powered by the Volkswagen 2.0 engine also used in the Porsche 914 for 1973 through 1975 model years. 2,099 units were produced. The 912E was replaced by the front-engine Porsche 924 for the 1977 model year.
Model year 2013–2016 diesel Porsche Cayennes are included in the Volkswagen ... the Cayenne Turbo S E-Hybrid was released for both regular and Coupé body styles. A ...
Body style: 5-door SUV: The Porsche Macan is a compact luxury crossover SUV ... Since 2015, its first full year in the market, the Macan has been the best-selling ...
The T6 debuted in 1962 as a facelift on 356B without the longer wheelbase or the 911-like front and rear style of the T7. The increase in body length was used on the T7 prototype [3] for the rear '+2' passenger room making the body a full(er) four-seater, not for additional space for a six cylinder engine as it, as well as the T6, was a 356 ...
Since the introduction of the fourth generation in 2016, the two models have been marketed as the Porsche 718 Boxster and Porsche 718 Cayman. The nameplate Boxster is a portmanteau of boxer , a reference to its flat or boxer engine , and roadster , a reference to the body style.
As Porsche helped to popularise this body style, they took out a trademark for the Targa name and manufacturers sought for alternative names for their removable tops. Porsche got the name "Targa" from the Targa Florio, the road race in Sicily where Porsche was very successful. Targa means "plate" (or placard) in Italian.