scootr said:
Zed Baron said:
I had a loan of a Boxster for a couple of months, great car. IMG_3215 2.jpg
As some one who has had the chance to drive both cars back to back I would love to hear more of your comparisons. Everybody says if you want comfort drive the BMW and want driving take the Porsche.
On paper it should be a bit more capable than my 3l E89
The Boxster S is 145 kg lighter with 22 hp more. The mid engine car layout intrigues me.
https://youtu.be/Pe9tYS9qaK4
Had two in the past, the Boxster will definitely out handle your E89 and is much more nimble on its feet, but Z4 is a much better cruiser. The Boxster is a joy to drive though making the E89 feel a little ordinary in comparison. The engines sound great, especially the PSE with the exhaust valve bypassed but they are quite low on torque relative to their BHP and the competitions engines. It's one thing I noticed when I bought my E85 3.0i, the low down grunt (especially after I did the vanos seals) was much more pronounced that in the Boxster's despite my second one have over 70BHP more. To get similar low down grunt I think you need to be looking at 997's instead of 987's. That said they're a great engine, with great throttle response but one that really needs to be rev'd and they do like to be rev'd!

They do seem to eat consumables more than a BMW too, clutches etc seem to wear more quickly but that could just be the way they're driven.
As Rob/Andy have alluded to the engines are definitely more fragile than the BMW ones and when they go wrong it's usually catastrophic and horrendously expensive. That said the internet does its usual job of over playing this and the specialists will tell you the failure rates even in the worst model years for IMS bearings is less than 10%, but that's still unacceptably high in my opinion. Other issues include rear main seals, PCV and bore scoring, although the later is much less prevalent on the 3.2/3.4 engines. It's more of an issue on the 3.6 and 3.8 911's, but again not every car is affected. Other things I replaced in my ownership that you wouldn't really expect to fail on cars with no more than 50k on them when I got rid where front and rear suspension arms, track rods, knocking shocks that didn't leak and leaking shocks that didn't knock!

I even had a few buttons falling of the stereo unit! The last one I was probably just unlucky with, but the other failures are quite common.
All that said my old Boxster RS60 is the only car I ever regret selling. Honestly though I don't know how much of that is now rose tinted glasses and at the time when I sold it I wasn't directly replacing it as the money was going into a business venture. If I'd been replacing it at the time with say a 911S for example, I may well have a different recollection.