Have used Select several times to sort a new car , a task I never never used to particularly enjoy however their dedicated contacts are great and make the admin side really hassle free and you do feel they are on your side looking out for you.The prices on the website are accurate.
Porsche Taycan Saloon
350kW 93kWh 4dr RWD Auto [75 years/22kW/5 Seat] [2024]
Porsche Taycan Saloon
Key facts & figures
- Fuel Type: Electric
- 0-62mph: 5.4 seconds
- Manufacturer OTR: £88,079
- Body Type: Saloon
- No. of seats: 5
- CO2 emissions: 0 g/km
- Battery Range (official): 314 miles
- Vehicle efficiency: 3 miles per kWh
- Battery Capacity: 93.4 kWh
When the Toyota Prius was launched as the first mass-produced hybrid vehicle, critics scoffed, saying it’d never catch on.
Fast forward two decades, and we're approaching the other end of the electrification transformation – an all-electric mass-produced supercar.
Let's face it, such a vehicle was something traditional petrolheads never wanted to contemplate.
But German automotive giant Porsche has demonstrated it’s got the muscle, the tech and the know-how to prove everyone wrong.
Yes, there are a handful of examples, but they’re mainly limited-in-number hypercars, which cost north of a million in most cases.
The Taycan isn't really a supercar as such. Still, it's about the closest we can get just now without spending seven figures – and proves that a genuinely electric supercar is perfectly doable by a traditional, mainstream manufacturer.
Regardless of whether you regard the Taycan as a supercar, it can outrun almost every petrol supercar that's ever existed in its fastest spec.
It has already been around for five years, unveiled at the Frankfurt Motor Show in 2019, and a brand new facelifted version arrives in the Spring in 2024. Before that one arrives, let's look at the existing model.