Performance+ Battery option pro
Rennlist Member

Until the EA DC fast charge network can be as reliable and widely accessible as the Tesla Super Charger network, the Taycan will likely be our urban car for in town/short out-of-town trips. Our most frequent long trip is going between NorCal and SoCal on I-5 and if I am not mistaken, there is only one stop along I-5 with a few 800V chargers. It would be too risky to take the car on a trip like this. (See my charger disruption statement above
)I never said no one complained about PAYING for it. Or no one had MORE than they needed. But I don't think anyone ever said "I wish my car had less range".
You know your habits well, so I'm sure you'll buy what you need.
I never said no one complained about PAYING for it. Or no one had MORE than they needed. But I don't think anyone ever said "I wish my car had less range".
You know your habits well, so I'm sure you'll buy what you need.
You do get a HP and torque boost but no improvement in 0-60 and top speed. Therefore you are just working harder to lug more weight around. :-)
As for the Sports Chrono, it seems like it only matters for the ICE Porsche models like a 911 which specifically listed different 0-60 times with/without Sports Chrono but for Taycan 4s, only a single 3.8s is listed which leads me to believe that the Sports Chrono is not needed for launch control in the Taycan. (Anyone out there can confirm?) In fact, it is interesting that on a base 911, the landing page quoted the 4.0s 0-60 time and the 3.8s with Sports Chrono is somewhat buried in the subsequent page. It just shows how conservative Porsche is with the specs.
So for my use case, it seems like the Performance+ is not an option which will do much and I can spend the money on the more frivolous options.
Last edited by Calkar; Apr 28, 2021 at 11:29 AM.
FWIW Tesla never made a 40 kWh pack. The few "40 kWh" cars that were delivered had software-nerfed 60 kWh packs. One could pay to unlock the extra capacity. (Similar to Supercharging being optional on the 40/60 kWh car via software lock.) When Tesla took them in trade, they would resell them as 60 kWh cars. Supercharging enabled too.
Last edited by whiz944; Apr 30, 2021 at 09:40 AM.
FWIW Tesla never made a 40 kWh pack. The few "40 kWh" cars that were delivered had software-nerfed 60 kWh packs. One could pay to unlock the extra capacity. (Similar to Supercharging being optional on the 40/60 kWh car via software lock.) When Tesla took them in trade, they would resell them as 60 kWh cars. Supercharging enabled too.
BTW, does anyone know what is the reserved capacity on a Taycan? I know Audi was very conservative with the E-tron until this year. I would assume that it is >10%, so after a few years of wear-n-tear, it may still be okay with a high reserve. From my experience, the wear-n-tear is not so bad on the Tesla as I slow charge at home 99%+ of the time and only charge to 90% SOC. A lot of DC fast charging would probably kill the pack sooner as demonstrated by a few youtubers.
I have one of the early Model 3 Long Range RWD cars. It is a remarkably efficient combination. I've put a lot of highway miles on it and have no complaints with range or Supercharging speeds. Back in 2019 I did a cross country road trip with a group of car buffs and three of the cars were Teslas. A Model S 70D, a Model X 75D, and my Model 3 - which has the 75 kWh pack. It was pretty clear that the battery and charging tech in the Model 3 was superior to the S and X. Plus the TM3 was much more efficient. They probably spent 2x more time charging than I did. Since then, Tesla has offered the Raven version of the S/X which has helped some. It will be interesting to see how the latest refresh works out.
I wouldn't hold my breath for solid state batteries. While they work in the lab, it will take a long time for them to be proven in automotive use, and even longer to scale into production. Todays Li-ion chemistries work well enough, and prices are coming down fast enough, that even when they are viable any movement towards them will be gradual. Sandy Munro speculated in a recent Q&A that Tesla is already coming close to $60/kWh at the cell level. Especially when their 4680-based packs start hitting the streets.
As far as the Taycan and driving between NorCal and SoCal goes - my thoughts are that as long as only one charging stop is needed, it would be ok. In an ICE car, I've always made a stop in the middle for a bio break anyway. Usually at Kettleman or Harris Ranch. (The latter especially now that they have the take-out BBQ area.) So coupling that with some high-speed charging isn't a big deal. But running a sample trip, from my house near San Jose to, say, Van Nuys, through A Better Route Planner shows a Taycan will need two stops with either battery choice. And neither is at Kettleman or Harris. So I would have to make three stops.
Last edited by whiz944; Apr 30, 2021 at 04:56 PM. Reason: Spell Sandy's name right...
I have one of the early Model 3 Long Range RWD cars. It is a remarkably efficient combination. I've put a lot of highway miles on it and have no complaints with range or Supercharging speeds. Back in 2019 I did a cross country road trip with a group of car buffs and three of the cars were Teslas. A Model S 70D, a Model X 75D, and my Model 3 - which has the 75 kWh pack. It was pretty clear that the battery and charging tech in the Model 3 was superior to the S and X. Plus the TM3 was much more efficient. They probably spent 2x more time charging than I did. Since then, Tesla has offered the Raven version of the S/X which has helped some. It will be interesting to see how the latest refresh works out.
I wouldn't hold my breath for solid state batteries. While they work in the lab, it will take a long time for them to be proven in automotive use, and even longer to scale into production. Todays Li-ion chemistries work well enough, and prices are coming down fast enough, that even when they are viable any movement towards them will be gradual. Sandy Monroe speculated in a recent Q&A that Tesla is already coming close to $60/kWh at the cell level. Especially when their 4680-based packs start hitting the streets.
As far as the Taycan and driving between NorCal and SoCal goes - my thoughts are that as long as only one charging stop is needed, it would be ok. In an ICE car, I've always made a stop in the middle for a bio break anyway. Usually at Kettleman or Harris Ranch. (The latter especially now that they have the take-out BBQ area.) So coupling that with some high-speed charging isn't a big deal. But running a sample trip, from my house near San Jose to, say, Van Nuys, through A Better Route Planner shows a Taycan will need two stops with either battery choice. And neither is at Kettleman or Harris. So I would have to make three stops.

Yes, solid state battery is going to be a long shot but in 10 years, who knows. But the $60/kwh cell price point should be upon us very soon and that will really change the picture for EVs.
The issue I have with a norCal to SoCal trip in a Taycan is that if there is any technical problem at the 800V charging station, it would be a major hassle since there seems to be one stop with a few DC chargers. This is like the SC congestion issue I mentioned. It was the early days for Tesla and I needed to charge at the I-5 Grapevine station but since it was the day after X'mas, there was a 2-3 hour wait since there were only 5-6 SC chargers and tons of cars return from/to LA. I actually had to skip the Grapevine charger at the advise of a Tesla employee there and made it to Harris Ranch with heat off and driving at 50mph. Luckily that the post-holiday I-5 was congested so I can only go under 50mph and arrived at Harris Ranch with 20-30 miles to spare. :-) That was the only close call for the past 8-9 years.
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The issue I have with a norCal to SoCal trip in a Taycan is that if there is any technical problem at the 800V charging station, it would be a major hassle since there seems to be one stop with a few DC chargers. This is like the SC congestion issue I mentioned. It was the early days for Tesla and I needed to charge at the I-5 Grapevine station but since it was the day after X'mas, there was a 2-3 hour wait since there were only 5-6 SC chargers and tons of cars return from/to LA. I actually had to skip the Grapevine charger at the advise of a Tesla employee there and made it to Harris Ranch with heat off and driving at 50mph. Luckily that the post-holiday I-5 was congested so I can only go under 50mph and arrived at Harris Ranch with 20-30 miles to spare. :-) That was the only close call for the past 8-9 years.

In the non-Tesla world, they have been surprisingly slow in adding capacity along I-5. According to plugshare, Harris Ranch has 6 50 kW EA stalls on one side of the road, and 3 50 kW Chargepoints on the other side. Firebaugh has 4 EA stalls - but according to plugshare they are currently down for some reason. Kettleman has 1 stall... This has just got to change...
I shake my head in dismay as some of the very first Superchargers that Tesla installed were to go 'from Lake Tahoe to Los Angeles' via I-5. Harris and Tejon were two of the original six sites. (The others being Gilroy, Folsom, Barstow (for the 'Vegas run'), and Hawthorne.) And before that, the Roadster guys had set up charging spots along I-5 from San Diego to Seattle.
I guess all this is a long-winded way of saying I would always go for the larger battery pack - for range margin, longevity, perhaps resale value, etc. In a car with a six figure price tag, it seems silly to do otherwise.
Last edited by whiz944; Apr 30, 2021 at 05:48 PM.

In the non-Tesla world, they have been surprisingly slow in adding capacity along I-5. According to plugshare, Harris Ranch has 6 50 kW EA stalls on one side of the road, and 3 50 kW Chargepoints on the other side. Firebaugh has 4 EA stalls - but according to plugshare they are currently down for some reason. Kettleman has 1 stall... This has just got to change...
I shake my head in dismay as some of the very first Superchargers that Tesla installed were to go 'from Lake Tahoe to Los Angeles' via I-5. Harris and Tejon were two of the original six sites. (The others being Gilroy, Folsom, Baker (for the 'Vegas run'), and Hawthorne.) And before that, the Roadster guys had set up charging spots along I-5 from San Diego to Seattle.
I guess all this is a long-winded way of saying I would always go for the larger battery pack - for range margin, longevity, perhaps resale value, etc. In a car with a six figure price tag, it seems silly to do otherwise.
In a Taycan 4S without Performance Battery+: One stop at Panoche Shell with a second stop at Countryside Market with a total trip time of 6:31 and 45 minutes of charge time
In a Taycan 4S with Performance Battery+: Same two stops with total trip time at 6:18 with 32 minutes for charge time
For fun, I put in the Model 3 as a reference: One stop at Buttonwillow with total trip time at 6:01 and 20 minutes of charge time so in this case, with the 100+ mile of range advantage, it shows that range helps but the Model 3 has almost 50% better range vs the 10% of the Performance+
With or without the extra battery, this trip will still need two stops but will save 13 minutes. The real concern is indeed the number of chargers available. At both locations, there are 2 CCS 350kW, 2 CCS 150kW and 1 50kW ChaDeMo and as of this moment, it seems like all the chargers at Countryside Market are offline/no status. From this test, I would be very nervous to take the Taycan on this route. I agree that EA needs to really catch up with Tesla with the infrastructure. With that said, we are still ahead of UK. I watched one of the Taycan review on Youtube from UK and the reviewer mentioned that there are only a couple of 270kW chargers in the entire UK?
Last edited by Calkar; Apr 30, 2021 at 07:42 PM. Reason: Add model 3 data
In a Taycan 4S without Performance Battery+: One stop at Panoche Shell with a second stop at Countryside Market with a total trip time of 6:31 and 45 minutes of charge time
In a Taycan 4S with Performance Battery+: Same two stops with total trip time at 6:18 with 32 minutes for charge time
For fun, I put in the Model 3 as a reference: One stop at Buttonwillow with total trip time at 6:01 and 20 minutes of charge time so in this case, with the 100+ mile of range advantage, it shows that range helps but the Model 3 has almost 50% better range vs the 10% of the Performance+
With or without the extra battery, this trip will still need two stops but will save 13 minutes. The real concern is indeed the number of chargers available. At both locations, there are 2 CCS 350kW, 2 CCS 150kW and 1 50kW ChaDeMo and as of this moment, it seems like all the chargers at Countryside Market are offline/no status. From this test, I would be very nervous to take the Taycan on this route. I agree that EA needs to really catch up with Tesla with the infrastructure. With that said, we are still ahead of UK. I watched one of the Taycan review on Youtube from UK and the reviewer mentioned that there are only a couple of 270kW chargers in the entire UK?
You do get a HP and torque boost but no improvement in 0-60 and top speed. Therefore you are just working harder to lug more weight around. :-)
As for the Sports Chrono, it seems like it only matters for the ICE Porsche models like a 911 which specifically listed different 0-60 times with/without Sports Chrono but for Taycan 4s, only a single 3.8s is listed which leads me to believe that the Sports Chrono is not needed for launch control in the Taycan. (Anyone out there can confirm?) In fact, it is interesting that on a base 911, the landing page quoted the 4.0s 0-60 time and the 3.8s with Sports Chrono is somewhat buried in the subsequent page. It just shows how conservative Porsche is with the specs.
So for my use case, it seems like the Performance+ is not an option which will do much and I can spend the money on the more frivolous options.

Hope that helps.
Last edited by KC1979; May 4, 2021 at 12:26 AM.
Hope that helps.
As for the lease, the residual is similar to Tesla and I may opt in to purchase it if 3 years from now the car is worth more. Since it will be a lease through business, the lease "makes" sense. And if it is a personal lease, the lease is absolutely a no-go. As I mentioned before, the Porsche lease is actually better than the Tesla lease so I am happy. :-) We have 4 Tesla's already and just want a change. And in our neck of the wood, almost every other household has a Tesla so my fear is that I may have problem locating my car at the supermarket parking lot. And with the Frozen Berry which my wife picked, I doubt we will have issue finding the car.
my 4s with the big battery now shows 250 miles @ 100% SOC on the meter and driving just a bit over the posted speed limits in nice weather will deliver more than that.




