A few comments regarding the Turbo and Turbo S:
1. The Turbo S costs only 3-4k more than a Turbo with the same options but you get 40 hp more, a better sound from the interior, the Turbo S logos and a slightly sportier Sport Chrono setup (shifting, suspension, steering,etc.).
2. The Turbo's sound symposer is programmed to be slightly muted in the upper rev range vs the Turbo S,
3. The 40 hp difference give you a 2-3 seconds advantage from 0-300 kph, something which may not be important for speed limited countries but keep in mind that even the 30 hp difference between the old 997 Turbo and Turbo S was sometimes noticeable in real life driving situations. This isn't about straightline performance only.
4. What do you expect Walter Röhrl to say at a Porsche press event? He works for Porsche an they want to sell Turbos without the S too.
5. The reasons why the 991 Turbo models became more expensive are the AWS and the wider body. There was a suggestion from marketing to make AWS optional but this wouldj have required a completly new chassis/PTM/steering setup, complicating things further and actually raising development cost.
6. The advantages of PCCB are not really the ones described by many car journalists (durability and firm brake feel after some hot track rounds). Braking point precision, high speed brake performance and durability, etc. and of course the cleaner rims and good looks. Of course the standard brake is quite capable but PCCB is a notch better in many regards.
Getting a standard Turbo over the Turbo S makes only sense if you order a Turbo with Sport Chrono (MUST HAVE option) only and leave everything else away, to get a substantial price advantage, Or you live in a region with high car taxes.
--
RC (Germany) - Rennteam Editor Porsche 991 Turbo S (Sept. 2013), Cayenne GTS (958), BMW X3 35d (2013)