Porsche 911 (991)

Porsche 991
Porsche 911 (991.1) Carrera 4S
Overview
ManufacturerPorsche AG
Also calledPorsche 911
Porsche Carrera
ProductionSeptember 2011–December 2019
AssemblyGermany: Stuttgart
DesignerMichael Mauer (2008)
Body and chassis
ClassSports car (S)
Body style
LayoutRear engine, rear wheel drive / all wheel drive
Related
Powertrain
Engine
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase
  • 2,450 mm (96.5 in)
  • 2,457 mm (96.7 in) (GT3)
Length
  • 4,491 mm (176.8 in) (Carrera)
  • 4,506 mm (177.4 in) (Turbo)
  • 4,545 mm (178.9 in) (GT3)
Width
  • 1,808 mm (71.2 in) (Carrera)
  • 1,880 mm (74.0 in) (Turbo)
  • 1,852 mm (72.9 in) (GT3)
Height
  • 1,303 mm (51.3 in) (Carrera)
  • 1,296 mm (51.0 in) (Turbo)
  • 1,269 mm (50.0 in) (GT3)
Curb weight
  • 1,435 kg (3,164 lb) (Carrera)
  • 1,495 kg (3,296 lb) (Carrera S)
  • 1,554 kg (3,426 lb) (Carrera S Cabriolet)
  • 1,539 kg (3,393 lb) (Carrera 4S)
  • 1,646 kg (3,629 lb) (Targa 4S)
  • 1,605 kg (3,538 lb) (Turbo)
  • 1,627 kg (3,587 lb) (Turbo S)
  • 1,696 kg (3,739 lb) (Turbo S Cabriolet)
  • 1,485 kg (3,274 lb) (GTS)
  • 1,430 kg (3,150 lb) (GT3)
  • 1,420 kg (3,130 lb) (GT3 RS)
  • 1,470 kg (3,241 lb) (GT2 RS)
  • 1,380 kg (3,042 lb) (935)
Chronology
PredecessorPorsche 997
SuccessorPorsche 992

The Porsche 991 is the seventh generation of the Porsche 911 sports car, which was unveiled at the 2011 Frankfurt Motor Show on 15 September as the replacement for the 997. The 991 was an entirely new platform, only the third since the original 911 launched in 1963 (the 996 of 1999 was the second new platform). Production of the 991 generation ended on December 20, 2019, with 233,540 units produced.[1]

  1. ^ "Last Porsche 911 of the 991 generation comes off the production line". Porsche Newsroom. Retrieved 21 December 2019.

Developed by StudentB