Skip advert
Advertisement

Porsche 911 (992.2) – performance and 0-60mph time

The 992 is a properly quick car, with even the base Carrera taking just 4.1secs to reach 62mph

Evo rating
RRP
from £103,700
  • Impressive powertrains, chassis and usability
  • You need to push it hard to find the joy; expensive

You can’t buy a slow 992.2. On paper, the least accelerative model is the Carrera T, mostly due to its manual transmission, which reaches 62mph in 4.5sec and runs to a top speed of 183mph. It's a sweet shifting 'box but the gearing is long in typical Porsche fashion, and you'll go faster in a PDK car – as demonstrated by the auto-only Carrera, which gets to 62mph four tenths quicker (albeit with the same top speed). 

Advertisement - Article continues below

The Carrera S is a significant step up, completing the benchmark sprint in 3.5sec and topping out at 191mph – numbers you’d normally associate with supercars. All these figures are broadly in-line with 992.1 equivalents, but the GTS gets a noticeable step up in performance, hitting 62mph in just 3sec in both rear- and four-wheel drive forms – three tenths quicker than before. Top speed is 194mph.

That makes the GTS even quicker than a PDK-equipped GT3, which reaches 62mph in 3.4sec and runs to 193mph. With a manual, the 0-62mph time increases to 3.9sec. 

The 992.2 has more in its locker, though, and when the Turbo arrives, expect it to beat the outgoing car’s ballistic performance figures (0-62mph in 2.7sec and 205mph flat out in the Turbo S). The GT3 RS will trade ultimate straight line speed for a downforce-heavy aero package – the 992.1 hit 62mph in 3.2sec and topped out at 184mph. 

So the 992.2 is very quick on paper, and feels it on the road, too. Truth be told, even the regular Carrera is so quick these days that it’s difficult to imagine wanting any more performance from a road car. The PDK shifts so quickly and seamlessly that the performance is almost instantly available to you, yet there’s still joy in running to the redline – the turbocharged flat-six almost mimics the delivery of a naturally aspirated unit. 

The GTS is, plainly, ballistic. The larger engine capacity and hybrid elements give it fantastic reach and response, with a muscular mid-range building to an energetic top end. It doesn’t actually feel hybridised, but more like a big, hard-hitting naturally aspirated engine (oddly, its note is like that of a cross-plane V8 at times). 

The GT3 is the real deal though, and there’s no beating its sharpness and 9000rpm theatrics. It still has that familiar GT car shriek when you wring it out, and closer gear ratios than the 992.1 make those addictive sensations easier to access than before.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

The best eras for performance cars ranked: which decade came out on top for thrills?
evo eras
Opinion

The best eras for performance cars ranked: which decade came out on top for thrills?

We've taken a cross section of every decade of performance cars and the verdict is in. It might surprise you.
2 Nov 2025
Alpine A110 R Ultime review – Ferrari money for a four-cylinder, but it might be worth it
Alpine A110 R Ultime – front
Reviews

Alpine A110 R Ultime review – Ferrari money for a four-cylinder, but it might be worth it

The A110 is going out with a 340bhp bang in the shape of the highly tuned, hardcore R Ultime. Unsurprisingly, the ultimate A110 looks right at home on…
4 Nov 2025
Four fun used hot hatches that should hold their value
Used hot hatches
News

Four fun used hot hatches that should hold their value

Fast fun cars that won’t break the bank, to buy or when it comes time to sell
29 Oct 2025