Full disclosure, before we get started here: this will not be the sort of unbiased review you would find in, say, Consumer Reports. Both my personal enthusiasm and that of Gear Patrol generally for the Porsche 911 are well-documented; we celebrate great products here, and few other cars have managed to distinguish themselves from the pack over and over again with a Ben & Jerry’s scoop shop worth of flavors of excellence the way the 911 has. Odds are good that, unless you’re one of those staunch anti-Porsche types, you like it too — or at least have a general respect for it.
And, for my money’s worth, the 911 Turbo S stands as one of the best of the breed. I’ve already gone on record citing the regular 911 Turbo as the last sports car you might ever need; the Turbo S is simply that with a bit of extra power, and who ever complained about that?
Even in today’s world of 911 GT3s and Sport Classics and likely-incipient GT2 RSs and whatever wild performance variants are in the works, the Turbo stands tall. Before turbochargers found their way into every other car, truck and SUV on the planet, there was the 911 Turbo of the 1970s and 1980s: the first truly wild 911, a car whose propensity for snap oversteer and afterburner boost gave it the nickname “the Widowmaker.” The Turbo S first dropped in 1997, as the ultimate version of the 993-generation Turbo, packing a bit of extra power, a few extra accoutrements and a price tag worthy of its limited-run status. It proved popular enough that Porsche brought it back as a regular production model for the subsequent 996-generation car, and since then, it’s been the 911’s top-tier non-GT model.
But at Porsche, like in nature, evolution never stops. So for 2022, the folks at Zuffenhausen found a way to make the Turbo S even more extreme: the Lightweight Package.
The 911 Turbo S Lightweight Package’s changes are few

With all due respect to Porsche’s engineers and brand managers alike, the Turbo S’s “Lightweight Package” stretches the definition of its first name. Check the box for the pack — which adds $10,340 to the car’s $217,550 starting price — and you’ll see the following changes: