This is a cabrio supercar eclipse, the moment where two cars of different orbits overlap for a spectacular instant. The R8 Spyder has always traced a loftier financial loop than the 911 Carrera cabrio - the V10-powered R8 drop-top starts at £116,660, while you can get a box-fresh 911 convertible for £74,958 - but with the launch of this, ahem, budget-version R8 V8 and the top-of-the-line 911 GTS, two German giants have aligned neatly. True, there's long been the 911 Turbo to tempt soft-top buyers who simply wouldn't consider opening their chequebook for less than a six-figure sum, but for a proper, rear-wheel-drive 911 cabriolet, the £85,249 GTS is unchartered territory.
This article was originally published in the May 2011 issue of Top Gear magazine
The GTS is, remember, a last hurrah for the 997 Carrera range before an all-new 911 arrives this autumn. Its naturally aspirated, 3.8-litre flat six now puts out 402bhp through the rear wheels, meaning the GTS gives away just 22bhp to the V8-engined R8. Out on the road, the two cabrios are devilishly closely matched for pace. Both will crack 62mph in 4.8 seconds, both will get within a sneeze of 190mph. In a straight-line test, you'll run out of road and licence-points before you can squeeze a Rizla between them. But on a bendy B-road, most of us will go quicker in the R8. It's an astonishingly easy car to drive fast right from the off: simply point the nose at the apex, trust the supernatural balance and grip, and fling out the other end on a wave of surprise at your newfound talent. Sheesh, this car is good.
Threading the 911 through a corner is a more complex proposition. Traction from the huge rear tyres is near infinite - the GTS shares its wider rear track with the 4WD Carreras - but there's a little initial vagueness from the front end as you tip into a bend, requiring a couple of stabs at the wheel before locking onto the right line. That's partly because of the GTS's twitchier steering, far wrigglier than the Audi's more passive, motorway-friendly set-up. At the very limit, the 911 gives you more feedback, but at the expense of a little fluency. It's clearly a hugely talented car, but one that takes a while to feel comfortable on the limit. In the R8, you're an instant hero.
The old-timer Porsche can still trump the upstart R8 in a couple of departments. Seats, for one. And economy - the six-speed manual 911 returns 26.2mpg and 254g/km of CO2 to the R8's 19.6mpg and 337g/km. But buying a supercar for its practical seats and economy is like ordering a lapdance because your legs are a bit chilly.
The GTS is one of the very best of the cabrios in Porsche's baffling 911 line-up - quick and engaging with a beautifully judged ride. But shell out your hard-earned on it, and I guarantee there'll be a moment every so often - maybe once a week, maybe once a month - where you'd think, "Damn, wish I'd bought the coupe." The 911 is slightly compromised in soft-top form: a bit blurred round the edges, a little unsure of its purpose. The R8 feels even better than its hard-top sibling. It's a bona fide supercar, as good in V8 form as V10. Eclipse that.

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