I enjoyed the article because I've been thinking about buying a 2025 Taycan to replace my sports car. I intended to buy an electric Boxster this year but it won't be available. Now I think I'm likely to wait a bit -- love the Taycan charging and driving experience but I don't like the reported problems.
I'm stuck with which set of foibles I want to live with. Part of my interest in the Boxster is that I think it will be much higher volume than the Taycan and easier to get serviced ... because I'm not buying a garage queen ... I'm going to drive it within an inch of its useful life.Having now had both, the Taycan is a sports car (with sports car foibles). That's all you need to know. The drive, road handling is world class.
"a faulty charging station that sent a brief voltage spike to the Taycan, triggering an overvoltage protection fuse" ... wow... that's disconcerting.
I totally understand that, and it was an issue when I bought my CPO Taycan with 43k miles on it. But I got all the maintenance records (one-owner, single dealership servicing) and read them carefully; they showed that there was no big issue in my specific 2021 CT4 -- just the recalls that were all dealt with (and the usual replacement of tires, etc.). I test-drove the car and had it put up on a rack in the service department to look closely at the plate protecting the battery pack -- no dents or punctures. Strangely, the 43k miles of uneventful driving for the first owner gave me more solace than did some of the low-mileage Taycans on the market. The dealership even threw in an extra year of CPO warranty. So I bought it after thinking for a couple of months (during which time it didn't sell and went down in price), and I have had no problems in a half a year. About to do my first big trip in it, 1600 miles roundtrip. I'm curious to see how things goThis was a very good read - and spot on observations!
In all honesty, I wouldn't want to spend north of $1k/month on a car that can leave me stranded on the side of the road or one which could sit at the dealer for months - and that rules out the previous gen and current gen Taycan's for me. No matter how great a car is to drive, it has to be reliable - that's just the P0 for any car and I feel like Taycan is failing that test right now.