: ''This article is about the auto company. For its design consultancy subsidiary, see
Porsche Design Group''
'Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG', often shortened to ''Porsche AG'', or just ''Porsche'', is a
German sports car manufacturer, founded in
1931 by then
Austrian Ferdinand Porsche, the
engineer who also created the first
Volkswagen. The company is located in
Zuffenhausen, a city district of
Stuttgart,
Baden-Württemberg.
Reputation
In a
May 2006 survey, Porsche was awarded first place as the most
prestigious automobile brand by Luxury Institute,
New York; it questioned more than 500 households with a gross annual income of at least
US $200,000 and a net worth of at least US $720,000.
[1] The current Porsche lineup includes sports cars from the
Boxster roadster to their most famous product, the
911. The
Cayman is a hard top car similar to the Boxster in a slightly higher price range. The
Cayenne is Porsche's mid-size luxury
SUV. The
Carrera GT supercar was phased out in May 2006. Future plans include a high performance luxury
saloon/sedan, the
Panamera.
Porsche was awarded the 2006
J.D. Power and Associates award for highest Nameplate Initial Quality Study (IQS) of automobile brands.
[2]
As a company, Porsche is known for weathering changing market conditions with great financial stability, while retaining most production in
Germany during an age when most other German car manufacturers have moved at least partly to
Eastern Europe or overseas. The headquarters and main factory are still at Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen, but the Cayenne (and formerly the Carrera GT) is produced in
Bratislava,
Slovakia, and
Leipzig,
Germany. Most Boxster and Cayman production is outsourced to
Valmet Automotive in
Finland. The company has been highly successful in recent times, and indeed claims to have the highest profit per unit sold of any car company in the world, although its total profits are significantly lower than
Toyota's.
[3]
Porsche has for many years offered consultancy services to various other car manufacturers.
Studebaker,
SEAT,
Daewoo,
Subaru and
Yugo have consulted Porsche on engineering for their cars or engines. The
Lada Samara [4]was partly developed by Porsche in
1984. Porsche also helped
Harley-Davidson design their new engine in their newer V-Rod motorcycle.
Competitors
:''See also
Auto racing, further down in this article.''
In racing, Porsche's main rival has traditionally been
Ferrari, though their production vehicles appeal to quite different personalities, if similar demographics. The rivalry is therefore primarily because of both companies' storied racing heritage and the fact that some of their vehicles are of comparable performance. Porsche has a reputation for offering equal or higher performing cars than the more expensive Ferrari models, while overall Ferrari sells far fewer cars at much higher prices (for example, there are no Ferraris under US $100,000, while several Porsches are priced below that figure).
In the daily-driver marketplace, Porsche's traditional rivals are its fellow German automakers
Mercedes-Benz,
Audi, and
BMW (the Boxster competes directly with the
BMW Z4 and the
Mercedes-Benz SLK, for instance), as well as
Lotus,
Jaguar, and
Maserati. Ferrari, on the other hand, competes more directly with firms such as
Lamborghini,
Bugatti and
Aston Martin.
History
Professor Ferdinand Porsche initially started the company called "Dr. ing. h. c. F. Porsche GmbH" in 1931, with main offices in Königstrasse in the middle of Stuttgart. The company primarily were offering development work or consulting for motor vehicles, so no cars were initially built that had the Porsche name. One of the first assignments the new company got was from the German government to design a car for the people, a "Volkswagen" in German.
The first Porsche, the
Porsche 64 of 1939, used many components from the
Volkswagen Beetle.
Ferdinand Porsche's son,
Ferry Porsche, decided to build his own car because he could not find an existing car that he would buy. The first models of what was to become the 356 were built in a small workshop in
Gmünd,
Austria and had aluminum bodywork. The prototype car was shown to German auto dealers, and when pre-orders reached an set threshold, production was begun. Many regard the 356 as the first Porsche simply because it was the first model ''sold'' by the fledgling company. Porsche commissioned
Zuffenhausen-based company Reutter Carosseri, which had previously collaborated with Porsche on Volkswagen Beetle prototypes, to produce the 356's steel body. Porsche constructed an assembly plant across the street from Reutter Carosseri; that assembly plant is now known as Porschestrasse. The 356 was road certified in 1948.
Not long afterwards, on January 30, 1951, Ferdinand Porsche died from complications following a stroke.
In post-war Germany parts were generally in short supply, so the 356 automobile used components from the Beetle including its
engine,
gearbox, and
suspension. The 356, however, had several evolutionary stages, A, B, and C, while in production and many VW parts were replaced by Porsche-made parts. The last 356s were powered by entirely Porsche-designed engines. The sleek bodywork was designed by
Erwin Komenda who also had designed the body of the Beetle. Porsche's signature designs have, from the beginning, featured air-cooled rear-engine configurations (like the Beetle), rare for other car manufacturers, but producing automobiles that are very well balanced.
In 1963, after some success in
motor-racing, namely with the
Porsche 550 Spyder, the company launched the
Porsche 911 another air-cooled, rear-engined sports car, this time with a 6-cylinder
"boxer" engine. The team to lay out the body shell design was led by Ferry Porsche's eldest son,
Ferdinand Alexander Porsche (F. A.). The design phase for the 911 caused internal problems with
Erwin Komenda who led the body design department until then. F. A. Porsche complained Komenda made changes to the design not being approved by him. Company leader Ferry Porsche took his son's drawings to neighbouring body shell manufacturer Reuter bringing the design to the 1963 state. Reuter's workshop was later acquired by Porsche (so-called Werk II). Afterward Reuter became a seat manufacturer, today known as Keiper-Recaro.
The design group gave sequential numbers to every project (356, 550, etc) but the designated 901 nomenclature contravened Peugeot's commercial rights on all 'x0x' names, so it was adjusted to 911. Racing models adhered to the "correct" numbering sequence: 904 906, 908. The 911 has become Porsche's most well-known model, successful on the race-track, in
rallies, and in terms of sales. Far more than any other model, the Porsche brand is defined by the 911. It remains in production; however, after several generations of revision, current-model 911s share only the basic mechanical concept of a rear-engined, six-cylinder coupe, and basic styling cues with the original car. A cost-reduced model with the same body, but 356-derived running gear (including its four-cylinder engine), was sold as the 912.

The Porsche 912, a Porsche of the 1960s
In 1972 the company's legal form was changed from limited partnership to public limited company (German AG), because Ferry Porsche and his sister, Louise Piëch, felt their generation members did not team up well. This led to the foundation of an executive board whose members came from outside the Porsche family, and a supervisory board consisting mostly of family members. With this change, no family members were in operational charge of the company. F. A. Porsche founded his own design company,
Porsche Design, which is renowned for exclusive sunglasses, watches, furniture, and many other luxury articles. Ferdinand Piëch, who was responsible for mechanical development of Porsche's serial and racing cars, formed his own engineering bureau and developed a 5-cylinder-inline
diesel engine for Mercedes-Benz. A short time later he moved to Audi and pursued his career through the entire company, up to and including, the Volkswagen Group boards.
The first CEO of Porsche AG was Dr. Ernst Fuhrmann who had been working in Porsche's engine development. Fuhrmann was responsible for the so-called Fuhrmann-engine used in the 356 Carrera models, as well as the 550 Spyder, having four over-head camshafts instead of a central camshaft as in the Volkswagen-derived serial engines. He planned to cease the 911 during the 70s and replace it with the V8-front engined grand sportswagon 928. As we know today the 911 outlived the 928 by far. Fuhrmann was replaced in the early 80s by Peter W. Schutz, an American manager and self-proclaimed 911 aficionado. He was replaced in 1988 by the former manager of German computer company
Nixdorf Computer AG, Arno Bohn, who made some costly miscalculations that led to his dismissal soon after, along with that of the development director, Dr. Ulrich Bez, who was formerly responsible for BMW's Z1 model and today is CEO of Aston Martin.
In 1990, Porsche drew up a memorandum of understanding with
Toyota to learn and benefit from Japanese production methods. Currently Toyota is assisting Porsche with hybrid technology, rumored to be making its way into a Hybrid Cayenne SUV, as well as the upcoming four-door coupe, the Panamera.
Following the dismissal of Bohn, an interim CEO was appointed, longtime Porsche employee, Heinz Branitzki, who served in that position until Dr. Wendelin Wiedeking became CEO in 1993. Wiedeking took over the chairmanship of the board at a time when Porsche appeared vulnerable to a takeover by a larger company. During his long tenure, Wiedeking has transformed Porsche into a very efficient and profitable company.
Ferdinand Porsche's grandson,
Ferdinand Piëch, was chairman and CEO of the Volkswagen Group from 1993 to 2002. Today he is chairman of the supervisory board. With 12.8 per cent of the Porsche voting shares, he also remains the second largest individual shareholder of Porsche AG after his cousin, F. A. Porsche, (13.6 per cent).
Porsche's 2002 introduction of the
Cayenne also marked the unveiling of a new production facility in
Leipzig,
Saxony, which once accounted for nearly half of Porsche's annual output. The Cayenne Turbo S has the second most powerful production engine in Porsche's history, with the most powerful belonging to the Carrera GT.
In 2004, production of the 605 horsepower Carrera GT commenced in Leipzig, and at EUR 450,000 ($440,000 in the United States) it was the most expensive production model Porsche ever built.
As of 2005, the extended Porsche and Piech families controlled all of Porsche AG's voting shares. In early October 2005 the company announced acquisition of an 18.53% stake in
Volkswagen AG and disclosed intentions to acquire additional VW shares in the future. As of June 2006, the Porsche AG stake in Volkswagen had risen to 25.1%, giving Porsche a blocking minority, whereby Porsche can veto large corporate decisions undertaken by VW.
In mid-2006, after years of the Boxster (and later the Cayenne) as the dominant Porsche in North America, the 911 regained its position as Porsche's backbone in the region. The Cayenne and 911 have cycled as the top-selling model since. In Germany the 911 clearly outsells the Boxster/Cayman and Cayenne.
[5]
Relationship with Volkswagen

Schematic of Porsche's extended financial relationships.
The company has always had a close relationship with
Volkswagen, and as noted above, the first Porsche cars used many Volkswagen components. The two companies collaborated in 1969 to make the
VW-Porsche 914 and 914-6 whereby the 914-6 had a Porsche engine and the 914 had a Volkswagen engine, in 1976 with the
Porsche 912E (USA only) and the
Porsche 924, which used many
Audi components and was built at an Audi Neckarsulm factory. Most
944s also were built there although they used far fewer VW components. The
Porsche Cayenne, introduced in 2002, shares its entire chassis with
VW Touareg, which is built at the factory in
Bratislava. Both
Audi and
Å koda are wholly owned subsidiaries of
Volkswagen. In late 2005, Porsche took an 18.65% stake in VW, further cementing their relationship and preventing a takeover of Volkswagen, which was rumored at the time. Speculated suitors included
DaimlerChrysler,
BMW, and
Renault.
On
26 March,
2007 Porsche took its holding of Volkswagen shares to 30.9%, triggering a takeover bid under German law. Porsche formally announced in a press statement that it did not intend to take over Volkswagen (it would set its offer price at the lowest possible legal value), but intended the move to avoid a competitor taking a large stake or to stop hedge funds dismantling VW, which is Porsche's most important partner
[6]. Porsche's move comes after the
European Union moved against a German law that protected VW from takeovers. Under the so-called "Volkswagen Law", any shareholder in VW cannot exercise more than 20% of the firm's voting rights, regardless of their level of stock holding. The
European Court of Justice has already indicated that the law probably breaks EU rules, and a full judgment to that effect is expected later in
2007[7].
Corporate Restructure
With the VW stake acquisition, Porsche intends on reforming the company's format, with Dr Ing. h. c. F. Porsche AG becoming a subsidiary of a newly formed holding company called Porsche Automobil Holding SE, so as to separate the operating activities from holding activities of the company. There was an Extraordinary General Meeting for Porsche AG shareholders which took place on June 26, 2007 at the Porsche Arena in Stuttgart, Germany to discuss better the change to the company structure.
[1]
Auto racing
Main articles: Porsche in motorsport
Porsche has been successful in many branches of
auto racing, scoring a total of more than 28,000 victories. Porsche is currently the world's largest race car manufacturer. In 2006, Porsche built 195 race cars for various international motor sports events. In 2007, Porsche is expected to construct no less than 275 dedicated race cars (7 RS Spyder LMP2 prototypes, 37 GT2 spec 911 GT3-RSRs, and 231 911 GT3 Cup vehicles).
[8]
Pronunciation of "Porsche"
"Porsche", a proper name, is originally pronounced as ''PORSH-uh'' (
IPA ) (), which is how members of the Porsche family pronounce their name.
Some tend to vocalize the ''e'', which results in ''Por-SCHA'' (). Others, particularly in
Canada and the
United States, mistakenly treat the ''e'' as silent, a pronunciation rule that applies in
English and
French but not in German, producing the monosyllabic, ''porsh'' ().
★
The correct pronunciation of "Porsche"
Models
See:
Tractors

Porsche Diesel Super
★
Porsche Type 110
★
Porsche AP Series
★
Porsche Junior (14 hp)
★
Porsche Standard (25 hp)
★
Porsche Super (38 hp)
★
Porsche Master (50 hp)
★
Porsche 312
★
Porsche 108F
★
Porsche R22
★
Porsche AP16
Consumer models

The 911; the top selling model as of June, 2006

The 987, the 2006 Boxster model
★
356 (1948–1965)
★
550 Spyder (1953–1957)
★ '
911' (1964–Present)
★
★
911 (1964–1989)
★
★
★
930 (1975–1989)
★
★
964 (1989–1993)
★
★
993 (1993–1998)
★
★
996 (1998–2004)
★
★ '
997' (2004–Present)
★
912 (1965–1969)
★
914 (1969–1975)
★
924 (1976–1988)
★
928 (1978–1995)
★
944 (1982–1991)
★
959 (1986–1988)
★
968 (1992–1995)
★ '
Boxster' (1996–Present)
★
★
986 (1996–2005)
★
★ '
987' (2005–Present)
★ '
Cayenne' (2002–Present)
★
Carrera GT (2004–2006)
★ '
Cayman' (2006–Present)
★
Panamera (2008–Unknown)
★
Roxster (Unknown)
''NOTE: models in 'bold' are current models''
North American Sales Charts
Monthly (August 2007)
''Note: this information is from an
official Porsche document and is a record of Porsches sold in the
United States and
Canada during August 2007.''
Annual (2006)
''Note: this information is from an
official Porsche document and is a record of Porsches sold in the
United States and
Canada during 2006.''
Racing models
★
64
★
360 Cisitalia
★
550 Spyder
★
718
★
787
★
804
★
904
★
906
★
907
★
908
★
909 Bergspyder
★
910
★ '
911'
★
914
★
917
★
934
★
935
★
936
★
924
★
944
★
956
★
959
★
961
★
962
★
Porsche-March 89P
★
WSC-95/LMP1-98
★
LMP2000 (never raced)
★ '
RS Spyder (9R6)'
''Note: models in 'bold' are current models''
Prototypes and concept cars
★
Porsche 114
★
Porsche 356/1
★
Porsche 695 (911 prototype)
★
Porsche 901 (911 prototype)
★
Porsche 916 (flat-6 914)
★
Porsche 959 Prototype
★
Porsche 942
★
Porsche 969
★
Porsche Panamericana
★
Porsche 989
★
Porsche Varrera
★
Porsche Boxster Concept
★
Porsche Carrera GT Concept
★
Porsche E2
References
1. Porsche press release 5 May 2005
2. J.D. Power News Release
3. Forbes Autos review of Cayman S
4. Porsche Engineering info
5. Porsche USA press release 11 September 2006
6. Porsche triggers VW takeover bid
7. Top EU court finds against VW law
8. AutoWeek Porsche Story, ''Warehouse Shopping'', March 7, 2007
See also
★
Ferdinand Porsche (founder)
★
Ferry Porsche (Ferdinand Anton Ernst Porsche, 2nd generation, creator of the 356)
★
F.A. Porsche (Ferdinand Alexander Porsche, 3rd generation, designer of the 911)
★
Porsche Design Group
★
List of Porsche engines
★
CTS Car Top Systems
★ ''
External links
Official
★
Porsche official website
★
★
Porsche Finland
★
★
Porsche Canada
★
★
Porsche Germany
★
★
Porsche UK
★
★
Porsche USA
★
★
★
Porsche models
★
★
★
★
911 (997) models at official Porsche website
★
★
★
★
Boxster models at official Porsche website
★
★
★
★
Cayman models at official Porsche website
★
★
★
★
Cayenne models at official Porsche website
★
★
★
Porsche History
★
★
★
Porsche Racing History
★
★
★
Previous Porsche road models
★
★
★
Previous Porsche racing models
★
★
★
Recent Porsche AG press releases
★
★
★
Porsche Motorsports
Associates
★
Porsche Museum at Porsche official website
★
Porsche Zuffenhausen at Porsche official website
★
Porsche Leipzig official website
★
Porsche Design Group official website
★
Valmet Automotive official website
★
Champion Motorsport official website
★
Christophorus Magazine at Porsche official website
★
WTA Tour Championships official website
Clubs
★
Porsche Club Finland
★
Porsche Club of America
★
Porsche Club of Great Britain
★
Porsche Club of Germany
★
Porsche Club of Greece
★
Porsche Club of Norway
★
Porsche Club of Sweden
★
Classic Porsche club
★
Porsche Club of NSW
★
Porsche Owners Club
★
Porsche Club of Bahrain