Background
The Porsche 944 was introduced in 1982. Based on the existing Porsche 924 chassis, they became famous for their handling, rather than the performance they offered; while the 2.5-litre four-cylinder engine of the early cars was an eerily smooth engine for an inline four thanks to the innovative use of two counter-rotating balance shafts, no-one ever got out of one - not even the turbocharged version that hit the roads in 1986 - raving about the in-gear acceleration or top speed. This is hardly surprising, as the early normally aspirated cars could only muster around 143bhp, and while the first turbocharged cars could summon up 217bhp, even this was a relatively modest boost albeit one that enabled the more powerful car to hit 60mph in 5.9 seconds.
Which was a shame, because the 944 is still a top-flight sports car with handling that still holds its own, even now; with near-perfect 50:50 weight distribution thanks to its front-engine, rear-transaxle layout, it garnered praise from press and owners alike - even if everyone agreed that the chassis was easily capable of handling more power.
Porsche, sensitive to criticism and with more than half-a-mind on the bottom line, introduced the 247bhp Turbo in 1988, shortly followed by the Series 2 in 1989. The later, normally aspirated cars, were fitted with the 944 Turbo’s rounded nose, rear valance and braking system.
And the stats for the 944 Turbo are even more impressive. With a top speed of 162mph, it can hit 60mph in 5.5 seconds on its way to a quarter-mile time of 13.9 seconds and 101mph: it has metamorphosed into Kylie, with Venus Williams’ legs and lungs.
Available as both a coupe and a convertible, the range died in 1991 after selling around 163,000 cars in total. This made it, at the time, the most successful model Porsche had ever made, paving the way for the simply brilliant, but strictly evolutionary, Porsche 968.







