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What's the new Porsche 911's deadliest rival?

Can any of the fresh 911's ageing rivals prevent Porsche world domination?

  • You’ll have digested Chris Harris's verdict and video on the new '992-gen' Porsche 911. Done that? Good. Now we can get into the nitty-gritty of what it’ll go up against when it lands in the UK – in £93,100 Carrera S PDK form – later this year.

    See, the old 991-gen 911 was pretty much the best sports car in its class right up until its retirement. It evolved with turbos, better infotainment, rear-wheel steering and so on, to keep pace with new German and British rivals. None of its rivals are getting any younger, meanwhile, and are all in the process of being refreshed. Does the new Neunelfer have an easy stroll to the top of the class? Let’s see...

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  • Aston Martin Vantage

    On sale since: 2018
    Power vs new Porsche 911: 503bhp (+59bhp)
    Price vs new Porsche 911: £120,900 (+£27,900)

    Aston’s wide-mouthed Vantage is the 911’s youngest foe, though it shares underpinnings with Aston’s own DB11 and its potent V8 engine with the Mercedes-AMG GT. When we put it up against the old 911 GTS, the Vantage struggled to match the Porsche’s scalpel-sharp drive, and it’s not as practical. But James Bond doesn’t drive a Porsche…

    Both cars will get a manual gearshift in 2019, and we’re expecting faster, track-ier, and less roof-y versions of both to follow.

    Rule Britannia?

  • Jaguar F-Type P380 Coupe

    On sale since: 2013
    Power vs new Porsche 911: 375bhp (-69bhp)
    Price vs new Porsche 911: £66,240 (-£26,860)

    Is the F-Type really getting on for six years old? Cripes. Recently facelifted with slightly different intakes, trick LED lights and a refreshed but still below-par infotainment screen, the F-Type remains one of the most achingly beautiful cars on sale. We also love it for having badges that make sense – yes, a P380 really does have 380 (metric) horsepower.

    It’s too heavy, though, and tricky to see out of – two factors the old 911 always waved in the Jag’s undeniably pretty face. A £27k saving counts for a lot, though…

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  • BMW i8

    On sale since: 2014
    Power vs new Porsche 911: 369bhp (-75bhp)
    Price vs new Porsche 911: £114,200 (+£21,100)

    Still looks the business, doesn’t it? The i8 has been stubbornly ploughing its own furrow in the luxury sports car scene for almost half a decade, and though hybrid 911s, AMG GTs and F-Types are mooted, nothing else has yet offered its blend of economy and performance. The i8’s by no means the purest driving experience, and its cabin lacks theatre, but it’s an epic long-distance GT and is the £100k supercar with the cleanest conscience.

    It might not see which way the searingly quick new 911 had gone, though. Not ideal when you’re paying a whole Ford Fiesta ST in extra sticker price…

  • Mercedes-AMG GT

    On sale since: 2015
    Power vs new Porsche 911: 469bhp (+25bhp)
    Price vs new Porsche 911: £102,000 approx (+£9,000)

    AMG’s flagship has just had a facelift, revealed at last year's LA motor show. We’re concentrating on the ‘base’ model here – the standard AMG GT. It offers a more blood’n’thunder approach to sports car motoring, and there’s no doubt it’s always had a more punishing ride, lairy demeanour and cramped cabin compared to the 911.

    But, as the Porsche gets techier, bigger, and more sensible, might AMG’s re-honed super-coupe mount an unlikely comeback? If lessons learned from the super GT R can find their way into the standard car, Germany could have one heck of a sports car civil war brewing.

  • Audi R8 V10

    On sale since: 2015
    Power vs new Porsche 911: 562bhp (+118bhp)
    Price vs new Porsche 911: £123,000 approx (+£30,000)

    Like the AMG GT, Audi’s V10 hero has just woken up from cosmetic surgery, and had its sonorous V10 tickled for a tad more power – now equal to a McLaren 570S. New panels front and rear make it look precisely seventy-three per cent angrier.

    It’s the most everyday useable mid-engined supercar, no question, but is it still a bit too flash for some 911 lovers?

  • Then there’s the mid-engined Corvette C8, due to be revealed this year, aimed at younger buyers, and track-day goers. What about a used McLaren 540C, dropping into budget near a well-specced 911 Carrera S? And perhaps it’ll be BMW’s M8, not the i8, which the 911 stumbles over…

    We’ll find out soon enough...

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