PASM on 23' 911 "S"....
#1
PASM on 23' 911 "S"....
I am a bit confused and hoping somebody can help. On the 23' Carrera S configuration page it shows PASM Sport Suspension as a $1020.00 option. This used to be included when you checked the 7 speed manual box. So my question is what suspension is standard? In my case I am looking for the smoothest ride possible (please don't laugh) and need a bit of advise as to which suspension is best for me. Thanks.
Last edited by Motorin Mark; 09-15-2022 at 12:07 PM.
#3
Rennlist Member
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 4,405
Likes: 2,921
From: Newport Beach, CA and Melbourne, Australia
I am a bit confused and hoping somebody can help. On the 23' Carrera S configuration page it shows PASM Sport Suspension as a $1020.00 option. This used to be included when you checked the 7 speed manual box. So my question is what suspension is standard? In my case I am looking for the smoothest ride possible (please don't laugh) and need a bit of advise as to which suspension is best for me. Thanks.
As @Staffie Guy says you can option the sports suspension as a bundle with sports exhaust as well. If you want the smoothest ride possible then don’t option either but do option PDCC, although that will need rear steer as well so $5k. Ouch!
#4
If you go under Performance and choose the "7-speed manual transmission and sport chrono package" for zero dollars, you get sport chrono but not any of the other sport pkg stuff including S-PASM. If you look under Packages and choose "Sport Package i.c.w. Manual Transmission" for $3,390, you get the full monty - sport exahust, S-PASM, and sport chrono (which is included automatically w/ manual trans).
And yes, avoid S-PASM if you want a good ride. IMO the stock SPASM ride quality is noticeably worse than standard PASM. SPASM equipped cars drive like lowered cars... which they are. I just didn't think 10mm would be such a dramatic difference but it is.
And yes, avoid S-PASM if you want a good ride. IMO the stock SPASM ride quality is noticeably worse than standard PASM. SPASM equipped cars drive like lowered cars... which they are. I just didn't think 10mm would be such a dramatic difference but it is.
Last edited by AlterZgo; 09-15-2022 at 01:15 PM.
The following users liked this post:
doug_999 (09-16-2022)
#5
I disagree. I have a 21 C2S with manual and sport chrono of course. I opted for the Sport Package which got me the PASM Sport Suspension and PSE. I had test driven the PASM Sport and read up that there were several advantages to it, not just the suspension setup, but also:
Electronically variable active damping system with two manually selectable modes: "Normal" and "Sport"
Ride height lowered 10 mm compared to standard
Stiffer anti-roll bars (front and rear)
Extended front spoiler lip
Increased maximum rear spoiler height
In fact some reviews I read said that the Normal mode on a SPASM setup is very very similar to the regular PASM cars. I do not find it to be a rough ride at all. When I know I will be on better roads as our roads are not that great around here, I do sometimes engage the Sport mode for the suspension. It will automatically come on in Sport Plus mode, but you can also turn on Sport Plus and deactivate it right away or set an individual mode without the Sport suspension engaged.
As to PDCC, I follow the train of thought that it is unnecessary for a 911 unless you are talking about a top heavy Targa and is much more suited to an SUV. I would shy away from PDCC in favor or Rear Axle Steering.
Electronically variable active damping system with two manually selectable modes: "Normal" and "Sport"
Ride height lowered 10 mm compared to standard
Stiffer anti-roll bars (front and rear)
Extended front spoiler lip
Increased maximum rear spoiler height
In fact some reviews I read said that the Normal mode on a SPASM setup is very very similar to the regular PASM cars. I do not find it to be a rough ride at all. When I know I will be on better roads as our roads are not that great around here, I do sometimes engage the Sport mode for the suspension. It will automatically come on in Sport Plus mode, but you can also turn on Sport Plus and deactivate it right away or set an individual mode without the Sport suspension engaged.
As to PDCC, I follow the train of thought that it is unnecessary for a 911 unless you are talking about a top heavy Targa and is much more suited to an SUV. I would shy away from PDCC in favor or Rear Axle Steering.
The following 3 users liked this post by 3rdpedal:
#6
Rennlist Member
Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 4,405
Likes: 2,921
From: Newport Beach, CA and Melbourne, Australia
I disagree. I have a 21 C2S with manual and sport chrono of course. I opted for the Sport Package which got me the PASM Sport Suspension and PSE. I had test driven the PASM Sport and read up that there were several advantages to it, not just the suspension setup, but also:
Electronically variable active damping system with two manually selectable modes: "Normal" and "Sport"
Ride height lowered 10 mm compared to standard
Stiffer anti-roll bars (front and rear)
Extended front spoiler lip
Increased maximum rear spoiler height
In fact some reviews I read said that the Normal mode on a SPASM setup is very very similar to the regular PASM cars. I do not find it to be a rough ride at all. When I know I will be on better roads as our roads are not that great around here, I do sometimes engage the Sport mode for the suspension. It will automatically come on in Sport Plus mode, but you can also turn on Sport Plus and deactivate it right away or set an individual mode without the Sport suspension engaged.
As to PDCC, I follow the train of thought that it is unnecessary for a 911 unless you are talking about a top heavy Targa and is much more suited to an SUV. I would shy away from PDCC in favor or Rear Axle Steering.
Electronically variable active damping system with two manually selectable modes: "Normal" and "Sport"
Ride height lowered 10 mm compared to standard
Stiffer anti-roll bars (front and rear)
Extended front spoiler lip
Increased maximum rear spoiler height
In fact some reviews I read said that the Normal mode on a SPASM setup is very very similar to the regular PASM cars. I do not find it to be a rough ride at all. When I know I will be on better roads as our roads are not that great around here, I do sometimes engage the Sport mode for the suspension. It will automatically come on in Sport Plus mode, but you can also turn on Sport Plus and deactivate it right away or set an individual mode without the Sport suspension engaged.
As to PDCC, I follow the train of thought that it is unnecessary for a 911 unless you are talking about a top heavy Targa and is much more suited to an SUV. I would shy away from PDCC in favor or Rear Axle Steering.
#7
this gets into another subjective rabbit hole as comfort is highly individual.
that said, i felt that my 997.1 TT would pogo a bit in sport suspension. my 991.1 with PDCC and SPASM was phenominal in sport suspension mode. since then i've been a big fan of PDCC and SPASM and have it ordered on my 992. could have just been the overall platform change.
anyway, last fall i drove a SPASM and a PDCC/SPASM/RAS 992 back to back and found the latter to be more comfortable over the rougher sections of road on our test drive route.
that said, i felt that my 997.1 TT would pogo a bit in sport suspension. my 991.1 with PDCC and SPASM was phenominal in sport suspension mode. since then i've been a big fan of PDCC and SPASM and have it ordered on my 992. could have just been the overall platform change.
anyway, last fall i drove a SPASM and a PDCC/SPASM/RAS 992 back to back and found the latter to be more comfortable over the rougher sections of road on our test drive route.
Trending Topics
#8
It will depend on your roads. Down here in Florida where I see a pothole twice a year and the roads are smooth, I run SPASM in sport setting daily and the car glides and doesn’t feel rough at all. Pressures 33F/36R. Car runs much better and smoother at these pressures than 29/32.
#9
I disagree. I have a 21 C2S with manual and sport chrono of course. I opted for the Sport Package which got me the PASM Sport Suspension and PSE. I had test driven the PASM Sport and read up that there were several advantages to it, not just the suspension setup, but also:
Electronically variable active damping system with two manually selectable modes: "Normal" and "Sport"
Ride height lowered 10 mm compared to standard
Stiffer anti-roll bars (front and rear)
Extended front spoiler lip
Increased maximum rear spoiler height
In fact some reviews I read said that the Normal mode on a SPASM setup is very very similar to the regular PASM cars. I do not find it to be a rough ride at all. When I know I will be on better roads as our roads are not that great around here, I do sometimes engage the Sport mode for the suspension. It will automatically come on in Sport Plus mode, but you can also turn on Sport Plus and deactivate it right away or set an individual mode without the Sport suspension engaged.
As to PDCC, I follow the train of thought that it is unnecessary for a 911 unless you are talking about a top heavy Targa and is much more suited to an SUV. I would shy away from PDCC in favor or Rear Axle Steering.
Electronically variable active damping system with two manually selectable modes: "Normal" and "Sport"
Ride height lowered 10 mm compared to standard
Stiffer anti-roll bars (front and rear)
Extended front spoiler lip
Increased maximum rear spoiler height
In fact some reviews I read said that the Normal mode on a SPASM setup is very very similar to the regular PASM cars. I do not find it to be a rough ride at all. When I know I will be on better roads as our roads are not that great around here, I do sometimes engage the Sport mode for the suspension. It will automatically come on in Sport Plus mode, but you can also turn on Sport Plus and deactivate it right away or set an individual mode without the Sport suspension engaged.
As to PDCC, I follow the train of thought that it is unnecessary for a 911 unless you are talking about a top heavy Targa and is much more suited to an SUV. I would shy away from PDCC in favor or Rear Axle Steering.
At speed , things smooth out and I can't tell the difference in ride quality of the 992 from my prev PDCC equipped cars .
Last edited by MKW; 09-15-2022 at 10:36 PM.
#10
Carrera S comes with regular PASM standard (even with 7sp manual - which I also have) - SPASM requires extra $$$. Ideally you can test drive a car with regular PASM and SPASM to compare. I opted for regular PASM and am happy with my decision.
The following users liked this post:
doug_999 (11-16-2022)
#11
I think the way Porsche words their website is very deceiving. While building the new 992 911 GTS, if you select PASM, you actually removing the Sport PASM. The helper springs etc etc. Porsche needs to do a better job with their wording and make it very clear.....Choosing PASM REMOVES the sport suspension components that come standard on the GTS. Happened to me as the dealership, not realizing either, suggested I check that box and of course, I approved and my salesman went ahead and "added it". The car arrived 8 months later and I did not realize what had been done until after I took delivery of it. I am currently waiting for an answer from the dealership and Porsche USA for some sort of resolution. Call me crazy, but if something as expensive as 911 Turbo suspension components are removed, shouldn't there be a price adjustment? I have the 911 GTS Cabriolet. It drives and handles amazingly. I won't track it...and after reading this thread, maybe I dodged a bullet by not getting the sport suspension and I should just be happy with the smoother ride with the PASM.....and frankly, I don't know if there is a solution to this and I doubt Porsche would offer one.
#12
I think the way Porsche words their website is very deceiving. While building the new 992 911 GTS, if you select PASM, you actually removing the Sport PASM. The helper springs etc etc. Porsche needs to do a better job with their wording and make it very clear.....Choosing PASM REMOVES the sport suspension components that come standard on the GTS. Happened to me as the dealership, not realizing either, suggested I check that box and of course, I approved and my salesman went ahead and "added it". The car arrived 8 months later and I did not realize what had been done until after I took delivery of it. I am currently waiting for an answer from the dealership and Porsche USA for some sort of resolution. Call me crazy, but if something as expensive as 911 Turbo suspension components are removed, shouldn't there be a price adjustment? I have the 911 GTS Cabriolet. It drives and handles amazingly. I won't track it...and after reading this thread, maybe I dodged a bullet by not getting the sport suspension and I should just be happy with the smoother ride with the PASM.....and frankly, I don't know if there is a solution to this and I doubt Porsche would offer one.
#13
I think the way Porsche words their website is very deceiving. While building the new 992 911 GTS, if you select PASM, you actually removing the Sport PASM. The helper springs etc etc. Porsche needs to do a better job with their wording and make it very clear.....Choosing PASM REMOVES the sport suspension components that come standard on the GTS. Happened to me as the dealership, not realizing either, suggested I check that box and of course, I approved and my salesman went ahead and "added it". The car arrived 8 months later and I did not realize what had been done until after I took delivery of it. I am currently waiting for an answer from the dealership and Porsche USA for some sort of resolution. Call me crazy, but if something as expensive as 911 Turbo suspension components are removed, shouldn't there be a price adjustment? I have the 911 GTS Cabriolet. It drives and handles amazingly. I won't track it...and after reading this thread, maybe I dodged a bullet by not getting the sport suspension and I should just be happy with the smoother ride with the PASM.....and frankly, I don't know if there is a solution to this and I doubt Porsche would offer one.
#14
…… I have the 911 GTS Cabriolet. It drives and handles amazingly. I won't track it...and after reading this thread, maybe I dodged a bullet by not getting the sport suspension and I should just be happy with the smoother ride with the PASM.....and frankly, I don't know if there is a solution to this and I doubt Porsche would offer one.
Last edited by doug_999; 11-16-2022 at 02:53 PM.
#15
I am a bit confused and hoping somebody can help. On the 23' Carrera S configuration page it shows PASM Sport Suspension as a $1020.00 option. This used to be included when you checked the 7 speed manual box. So my question is what suspension is standard? In my case I am looking for the smoothest ride possible (please don't laugh) and need a bit of advise as to which suspension is best for me. Thanks.
and lots of people (some in this thread - and Car and Driver) will tell you the S-PASM does in fact ride rough. So if you want the better ride, don’t add that. You can still get the sports exhaust however.
The following users liked this post:
Motorin Mark (11-16-2022)