Remember when Porsche dabbled in the G.A. engine market?
In the early to mid 1980's, Cessna and Mooney flirted with them in the US market. The engines really did not work out for a number of reasons, starting with power to weight ratio, then cost, and then Cessna putting small aircraft production on hiatus. I believe there were some technical issues like cooling issues as well.
But the one thing that came with the PFM experiment was better styling. Check out the cowling and intake on the Cessna 172 with the PFM. I don't believe there has ever been a factory built, high wing Cessna that looked better in the nose. (The C&O turboprop conversion for the C 210 has a cowling that resembles it, but that is a later and different story).
http://porscheaviation.com/
The designers/engineers at Cessna should be looking back at that to update the appearance of the high wing line of aircraft (size and dimensions of the engines presently in use would be a factor in cowling design, of course, but they could use an update).
http://porscheaviation.com/index.php/cessna-pfm
