Porsche marks 50 years of Transaxle with themed year of pop-up installations
Porsche is celebrating the 50th anniversary of its Transaxle sports car architecture with a year-long series of pop-up installations at the Porsche Museum and other locations, focusing on the 924, 928, 944, and 968 mode…
nearly 400,000
4
1976–1995
What Happened
The Transaxle concept places the engine at the front and the transmission at the rear, connected by a driveshaft inside a rigid torque tube. This layout provides balanced weight distribution and precise handling, making the cars both sporty and suitable for everyday use. Four model lines – the 924, 928, 944, and 968 – were produced from 1976 to 1995, with nearly 400,000 vehicles sold.
Transaxle Meet – Spring Edition
Pop-up presentation 944 and 968
Transaxle Meet – Fall Edition
Pop-up presentation 928
Transaxle Meet – Winter Edition
“We have planned a series of pop-ups throughout the year: compact, flexible and offering constantly evolving perspectives on technology, design, motorsport and the spirit of the times.”
nearly 400,000
from 1976 to 1995 across four model lines
Why this matters
The Transaxle layout, with front engine and rear transmission, delivered balanced handling and sold nearly 400,000 units from 1976 to 1995, defining a generation of Porsche sports cars and showcasing the brand's engineering heritage.
Terms in This Story
- Transaxle
- A drivetrain layout where the engine is mounted at the front and the transmission is at the rear axle, connected by a driveshaft within a rigid tube to improve weight distribution and handling.
- Torque tube
- A rigid tube that encloses the driveshaft connecting the front engine to the rear transmission, maintaining alignment and transferring torque.
- Weissach rear axle
- A rear suspension design developed by Porsche that provides stable handling and reduces oversteer during cornering.
- Pop-up headlights
- Headlights that retract into the bodywork when not in use, common on sports cars from the 1970s to 1990s to improve aerodynamics and styling.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.