Driving a 356 is different than other period or modern sports cars. Many who have driven a VW Beetle imagine a 356 to be similar, as the VW heritage cannot help but shine through. The VW’s wonderfully light and direct steering, superb fit and finish, and much elegant engineering carry over to the 356. But the Porsche excels in many areas where the Beetle is lacking, such as horsepower, higher-speed handling, and passenger comfort.
Driving a good 356 is an adventure in being in control of a highly refined machine. Unlike Corvettes, front-engined Ferraris, MGs, Triumphs, Healeys, or Jaguars, the 356 is big on the inside, small on the outside, and a joy to drive due to the light feel and highly developed responsiveness. There is no other car on the road that makes you feel quite as in control as a 356. Even a 911, which owes much to the 356, seems a bit beefy and ponderous in direct comparison. The 911 is about power; the 356, finesse. You sit in a 911 and there are distinct boundaries between the car and you; the 356 feels like it was molded around you.
Porsche worried a great deal about control feel and ergonomics decades before the rest of the world caught on. In a good 356, all inputs are light, silky, and progressive. The unassisted steering is one of the best in the world, bar none. It requires a light touch and delivers just the right amount of feedback from the road, not so much that you tire from making constant adjustments yet plenty to let you know what the front wheels are doing. The steering has virtually no play yet does not bind or feel heavy. Move the wheel just a bit, and the car responds. If you are familiar with period American cars, the difference in steering precision and feel will simply amaze you.