What Made the Porsche 959 So Special?

Grey 1986 Porsche 959 Parked Front 3/4 View
Image Credit: Porsche.

In the mid-1980s, Porsche unleashed a supercar so advanced it looked like it came from the future. Packed with active suspension and a sequential twin-turbo engine, the 959 rewrote the rulebook for road-going performance and innovation.

Decades later, its blend of cutting-edge tech and blistering speed still captivates enthusiasts and engineers alike. Let’s explore 10 standout facts that explain why the Porsche 959 remains a legend in the supercar world.

1. World’s Fastest Production Car in 1986

Porsche 959
Image Credit: Yanko Malinov – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0/Wiki Commons.

Porsche quotes a top speed of 317 km/h (197 mph) for the 959 and described it as a world record for production sports cars at the time.

Few rivals even came close to that milestone back then.

2. Sequential Twin-Turbo Flat-Six Engine

1986 Porsche 959
Image Credit: Attribution: Matti Blume – CC BY 4.0/Wikimedia Commons.

Beneath its sleek body sits a 2.85-liter (2,849 cc) flat-six based on the architecture of Porsche’s 956/962 race engines. The clever sequential twin-turbo setup all but eliminated turbo lag and delivered a thrilling 450 PS burst of power.

3. 0–100 km/h in Just 3.7 Seconds

1986 Porsche 959 rearview
Image Credit: : Ed Callow – CC BY 2.0/Wikimedia Commons.

Period tests recorded around 3.7 seconds for 0–100 km/h.

Even by modern standards, that sprint still outpaces many contemporary supercars.

4. All-Wheel Drive Pioneer for Turbo Porsches

Porsche 959 Dakar
Image Credit: Porsche.

Long before AWD became a supercar staple, the 959’s advanced all-wheel drive system its PSK all-wheel-drive system could vary torque split, sending up to about 80% to the rear under hard acceleration.

That meant phenomenal grip, whether you were on asphalt, gravel, or snow.

5. Active Suspension and Ride-Height Control

Porsche 959 (1986)
Image Credit: Porsche.

Porsche has described the 959 as the world’s first production car with active suspension, paired with automatic ride-height adjustment.

This tech ensured optimal aerodynamics and comfort without any driver input.

6. Revolutionary Magnesium Alloy Wheels

Porsche 959 (1986)
Image Credit: Porsche.

The 959 used hollow magnesium wheels that form a sealed chamber with the tire, integrated with a tire-pressure monitoring system (paired with Denloc/run-flat tire tech).

That high-tech solution was decades ahead of its time.

7. Ultra-Limited Production

Porsche 959
Image Credit: Porsche.

Porsche built 292 series-production road cars, with customer deliveries beginning in 1987.

Today, these rare machines command prices well north of US$1.5 million at auction.

8. Star-Studded Ownership

Porsche 959
Image Credit: Porsche.

Tech pioneers and celebrities like Bill Gates, Jerry Seinfeld, and Martina Navratilova have all added a 959 to their garages.

Their passion underscores exactly how special this supercar really is.

9. Legendary Press Acclaim

Porsche 959
Image Credit: Porsche.

When Car and Driver finally drove the 959 in 1987, Car and Driver wrote: ‘We hesitate to call any car perfect… the word “perfect” is difficult to avoid,” praising its fusion of race-car performance and luxury-sedan comfort.

Superlatives don’t get much stronger than that.

10. Rally-Born Heritage

Porsche 959
Image Credit: Porsche.

Before its road-going debut, Porsche won the 1984 Paris–Dakar with the Porsche 953 (a 911-based AWD development car). The 959’s Dakar highlight was a 1–2 finish in 1986 (René Metge/Dominique Lemoyne first; Jacky Ickx/Claude Brasseur second).

That competition pedigree shines through in every twist of the ignition.

The Porsche 959’s Lasting Legacy

Porsche 959 Dakar
Image Credit: Porsche.

The 959 wasn’t just a halo car; it was a rolling laboratory of innovations that trickled into decades of supercars. Its sequential turbos, active suspension, and AWD system set benchmarks that Porsche and the wider industry still follow today.

More than 35 years on, the 959 remains an engineering masterpiece and a collector’s dream. It proved that pushing technical boundaries can create a machine as extraordinary now as it was in 1986.

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