Setting Nürburgring lap records in utility vehicles used to be the province of the well funded but perpetually silly—on shows like Top Gear, for instance. Instead of strapping the late, great Sabine Schmitz into a Ford Transit, Porsche has gone even further this time by strapping the brand's most powerful V-8 into the 2022 Cayenne Turbo GT, and the new "SUV, off-road vehicle, van, or pickup" record holder isn't only the king of the 'Ring, it's the quickest SUV we've ever tested.
While a 7:38.9-second Nordschleife lap time is a lofty achievement for any vehicle, it's pushing the limits of our current understanding of physics for a street-legal, 4979-pound SUV. Powering the Cayenne Turbo GT's exploration of the theoretical envelope is a 631-hp, twin-turbocharged 4.0-liter V-8 engine rated at 626 pound-feet of torque with a maximum engine speed of 6800 rpm, backed by Porsche's familiar ZF-sourced eight-speed automatic transmission.
With launch control activated and releasing the brakes just before the boost peaks, the Turbo GT squats and leaps off the line like a bull in a flank strap. It takes just 1.0 second to reach 30 mph. The eight-speed cracks off uninterrupted shifts as 60 mph arrives in a supercar-grade 2.8 seconds. The quarter-mile flies by in 11.1 seconds at 124 mph. Speaking of bulls, the Turbo GT bests the more powerful and expensive Lamborghini Urus by 0.2 second in the quarter-mile and by 0.3 second to 60.
In fact, transparency is the theme with the Cayenne Turbo GT. All of the things that are happening are being orchestrated by a great many systems working in concert behind the scenes, but in such a way that it seems as if it's happening instantaneously and at the sole behest of your fingertips and toes. It's not that any one of the systems in this bonkers Cayenne is so mind-blowing that it resets the benchmark. It's the way they all work together in concert that does.
Track use? Well, yes, and not just for marketing-stunt record laps either. With its XXL pizza-sized carbon-ceramic brake rotors (17.3 inches in front, 16.1 inches in the rear) in the grip of 10-piston front and four-piston rear calipers, the Cayenne Turbo GT stops as hard as you dare and considerably more quickly than you'd think. Stops from 70 mph compete with sports cars, requiring just 151 feet, and 100 mph is deleted in 301 feet. But it's not all brute force and sheer brawn. This is a Porsche, after all. There must be some sophistication.
Once you've fired up the engine and taken a few rips, tested the brakes, and felt your way through your first apexes, the next thing you're likely to notice is just how good four-wheel steering has become, delivering a nimbleness that belies the Turbo GT's 113.9-inch wheelbase and 194.6-inch overall length. With multilink suspension at all four corners and a ride height 0.7 inch lower than in a Cayenne Turbo Coupe, the Turbo GT manages body roll extremely well, aided by the active anti-roll bars of Porsche's Dynamic Chassis Control (PDCC) system. The Turbo GT's chassis systems inspire enough confidence that sports cars will struggle to keep pace in the canyons. It's that good.
Speaking of weight savings, there's a titanium exhaust running from just behind the catalytic converters down the center of the Turbo GT's underside to a pair of center-exit tips that turn a gorgeous shade of blue after they've gotten good and hot once or twice. Porsche claims this saves approximately 40 pounds compared to the already high-performance exhaust of the Cayenne Turbo Coupe. Not only does it save weight and look great, it sounds great too—but only when you want it to. No need to fuss with buttons or settings; just drive like a sane person would and it'll be the strong-but-quiet type. Dip the throttle into slightly aggro territory, and the sound rises from a low growl to an 84-decibel roar.
We expect there's even more depth to the daily-driver capabilities of this SUV, like the fact that it gets the new Porsche Communication Management 6.0 software, which brings wireless Apple CarPlay and wired Android Auto, among other upgrades, but we'd need to spend a lot more time with one to find out. If you're listening, Porsche, we're ready.