08-21-2014, 11:30 AM
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#21
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Engine Surgeon
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Cleveland GA USA
Posts: 2,425
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I've got a failure here with 14,139 miles on it. Yes, they do exist, last year I saw a 986 with 4K miles on it.
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Jake Raby/www.flat6innovations.com
IMS Solution/ Faultless Tool Inventor
US Patent 8,992,089 &
US Patent 9,416,697
Developer of The IMS Retrofit Procedure- M96/ M97 Specialist
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08-21-2014, 11:50 AM
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#22
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Listowel, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,120
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jake Raby
I've got a failure here with 14,139 miles on it. Yes, they do exist, last year I saw a 986 with 4K miles on it.
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Curious - what's the highest you've seen with a failure? Rumours abound that if you've gone 12 years and over 100K km's - the odds are way way low of a failure.
Thoughts?
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2011 Boxster 987.2 Arctic silver / Black leather, PDK with Sports Chrono Package Plus
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08-21-2014, 12:14 PM
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#23
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: So Cal
Posts: 45
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Giller
Curious - what's the highest you've seen with a failure? Rumours abound that if you've gone 12 years and over 100K km's - the odds are way way low of a failure.
Thoughts?
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That's a great question
After reading the many many posts on this subject, I bet Mr Raby does not give us an answer as it appears to be in his best interests to emphasize the worst.
Is he an expert on the M96, without a doubt, certainly one of the top in the world, maybe #1. Still it seams that its all about failures, not the vast majority that don't fail and never will fail.
I would think that he does have the data on what will cause failures and what PM most likely will prevent failure (other than replacement)
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08-21-2014, 12:17 PM
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#24
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
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nice car.
my tip, keep on eye on your needles. Make a mental note of how long it takes your coolant to point to 12 o'clock. It will take your oil about twice that to come up to temp. Don't rev the engine high before that.
Also, check your coolant level before you get in the car. Try lighting the tank with an LED flashlight behind the tank. Your coolant is should all one color, preferably pink which is the factory flavor. With that kind of low mileage the coolant tank may be brittle at this point. And make sure you have the most recent coolant cap from 2004. Replace your oil cap while you're at it. Over time these caps loosen up and can't hold the minimum seal required. And use a decent oil, you bought a Porsche not an old truck. I switched from Castrol Edge 5-40 to Motul 8100 Xcess 5-40. It's about twice the cost but the higher protection is worth it.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW
Last edited by Perfectlap; 08-21-2014 at 12:20 PM.
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08-21-2014, 12:27 PM
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#25
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
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Quote:
Originally Posted by plus3db
That's a great question
After reading the many many posts on this subject, I bet Mr Raby does not give us an answer as it appears to be in his best interests to emphasize the worst.
Is he an expert on the M96, without a doubt, certainly one of the top in the world, maybe #1. Still it seams that its all about failures, not the vast majority that don't fail and never will fail.
I would think that he does have the data on what will cause failures and what PM most likely will prevent failure (other than replacement)
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you've got five posts into this forum and you want to start an argument already?
One thing you should know about this forum is that we steer clear of pissing contests. In fact, it may be the only Porsche forum I've been to where there isn't a daily drama.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW
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08-21-2014, 12:57 PM
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#26
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: So Cal
Posts: 45
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap
you've got five posts into this forum and you want to start an argument already?
One thing you should know about this forum is that we steer clear of pissing contests. In fact, it may be the only Porsche forum I've been to where there isn't a daily drama.
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While I may not have many posts, that does not mean I have not read a lot of the threads.
I'm not trying to start an argument at all. I'm just calling them as I see them.
The fact is, he has an extreme amount of knowledge on the M96 and I just can't believe that all is bad with the engine. Porsche has shipped 100's of thousands of them in various forms and they all will self destruct?
I am just asking a question that I guess too many are afraid to ask.
He is an expert, but IMHO, he almost always see's the glass as half empty and focuses on fear and and destruction. Lets fact facts, he does profit from repairing and building motors. I'm not saying that is a bad thing nor is he not entitled to profit from his knowledge and research. Very much the contrary.
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08-21-2014, 05:07 PM
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#27
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
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I'm not calling your familiarity into question simply your desire to steer towards controversy already. The topics you raise have been discussed many times with predictably heated responses.
Don't punch the gift horse in the mouth. By your own admission JR is an expert on our engines why don't you just take his posts for what they're worth.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW
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08-21-2014, 06:26 PM
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#28
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jakesbox
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Charlotte NC
Posts: 759
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Giller
I don't get why so many people buy these cars and then don't drive them? They aren't an investment! Have some fun, drive them.
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Which is why i sold them . Now I have a 996 daily driver!
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2003 996 Twin Turbo X50, PCCB, polar silver / 2004 996 Carerra Cabriolet, midnight blue, cinnamon leather, IMS Pro / 2003 Artic Silver Boxster - Short Throw Shift, IMS Upgrade, Carerra Light Wheels, De-Snorked with Evoms Cold Air Intake, GHL Exhaust (Sold) / 2002 Seal Grey Boxster - Fabspeed Exhaust, Black powder coated wheels, Porsche stripes (Sold) / 2 -1957 356 A Speedsters (signal red and seal grey) (Sold) / 1989 944 Turbo (m030 S options)
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08-21-2014, 07:14 PM
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#29
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Colorado
Posts: 442
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Quote:
Originally Posted by plus3db
While I may not have many posts, that does not mean I have not read a lot of the threads.
I'm not trying to start an argument at all. I'm just calling them as I see them.
The fact is, he has an extreme amount of knowledge on the M96 and I just can't believe that all is bad with the engine. Porsche has shipped 100's of thousands of them in various forms and they all will self destruct?
I am just asking a question that I guess too many are afraid to ask.
He is an expert, but IMHO, he almost always see's the glass as half empty and focuses on fear and and destruction. Lets fact facts, he does profit from repairing and building motors. I'm not saying that is a bad thing nor is he not entitled to profit from his knowledge and research. Very much the contrary.
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I agree...EVERYONE of these engines will not crater. I thought I heard numbers like 1%, to 5%? depending upon the year and engine...as an engineer...I love finding the REAL relationship of data associated with engine failure...I have the utmost respect for Jake. So, I'm not pissing with him...I'd love to know for real the results of a root cause analysis.
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08-21-2014, 07:17 PM
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#30
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 150
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Quote:
Originally Posted by plus3db
While I may not have many posts, that does not mean I have not read a lot of the threads.
I'm not trying to start an argument at all. I'm just calling them as I see them.
The fact is, he has an extreme amount of knowledge on the M96 and I just can't believe that all is bad with the engine. Porsche has shipped 100's of thousands of them in various forms and they all will self destruct?
I am just asking a question that I guess too many are afraid to ask.
He is an expert, but IMHO, he almost always see's the glass as half empty and focuses on fear and and destruction. Lets fact facts, he does profit from repairing and building motors. I'm not saying that is a bad thing nor is he not entitled to profit from his knowledge and research. Very much the contrary.
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We discussed this a couple times here and I even posted, years ago, some of the production numbers from Porsche for the Boxster and we "guesstimated" the number of failures. Given the numbers, in the 100s of 1000s, the actual percentage of cars with the IMS failure is certainly low. Sure many of the dealers and indies I talk to have seen the issue but again, in very low numbers compared to the total number of cars produced. From the top of my head around 160,000 986s were produced. Certainly less than 2% had IMS issues.
The lawsuit/settlement with PCNA will probably show way less claims than that.
I can bet Jake did not work on more than 3,200 engines with IMS failures.
Keep in mind people normally come to forums to discuss problems, and rarely to say how great they had their cars running for 10 years without a single issue.
Jake is indeed a great guy, top notch mechanic/inventor and an authority on M96 engines. One of my buddies attended his class on the engine and was extremely pleased and impressed. That comes from someone that was a Porsche Master mechanic for many years and left to open his own shop.
CR
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08-21-2014, 07:30 PM
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#31
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Colorado
Posts: 442
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap
I'm not calling your familiarity into question simply your desire to steer towards controversy already. The topics you raise have been discussed many times with predictably heated responses.
Don't punch the gift horse in the mouth. By your own admission JR is an expert on our engines why don't you just take his posts for what they're worth.
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I've seen some really stupid posting by folks who have been on here as a result of their lack of common sense and mechanical ability. At least this guy is asking good, valid questions.
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08-21-2014, 07:56 PM
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#32
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: So Cal
Posts: 45
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap
I'm not calling your familiarity into question simply your desire to steer towards controversy already. The topics you raise have been discussed many times with predictably heated responses.
Don't punch the gift horse in the mouth. By your own admission JR is an expert on our engines why don't you just take his posts for what they're worth.
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Fair comment, and Jake does provide information not available many other places. Maybe its his no BS manner
Quote:
Originally Posted by jdlmodelt
I agree...EVERYONE of these engines will not crater. I thought I heard numbers like 1%, to 5%? depending upon the year and engine...as an engineer...I love finding the REAL relationship of data associated with engine failure...I have the utmost respect for Jake. So, I'm not pissing with him...I'd love to know for real the results of a root cause analysis.
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Exactly!
Quote:
Originally Posted by crod
We discussed this a couple times here and I even posted, years ago, some of the production numbers from Porsche for the Boxster and we "guesstimated" the number of failures. Given the numbers, in the 100s of 1000s, the actual percentage of cars with the IMS failure is certainly low. Sure many of the dealers and indies I talk to have seen the issue but again, in very low numbers compared to the total number of cars produced. From the top of my head around 160,000 986s were produced. Certainly less than 2% had IMS issues.
The lawsuit/settlement with PCNA will probably show way less claims than that.
I can bet Jake did not work on more than 3,200 engines with IMS failures.
Keep in mind people normally come to forums to discuss problems, and rarely to say how great they had their cars running for 10 years without a single issue.
Jake is indeed a great guy, top notch mechanic/inventor and an authority on M96 engines. One of my buddies attended his class on the engine and was extremely pleased and impressed. That comes from someone that was a Porsche Master mechanic for many years and left to open his own shop.
CR
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Yes, and as I said before, he may even be the #1 expert
Also, its not just 986 engines, it is some 996 engines as well, so the number of M96's is higher
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08-22-2014, 08:56 AM
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#33
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Registered User
Join Date: May 2014
Location: Beaumont, Texas
Posts: 4
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I have only changed the oil once in the car since i purchased it and used Mobil 1 0W-40 as the sticker on the inside of the trunk showed. You mentioned a different oil Motul (ive not familier with this brand) should i look at substituting something for the Mobil?
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08-22-2014, 09:10 AM
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#34
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jdlmodelt
I've seen some really stupid posting by folks who have been on here as a result of their lack of common sense and mechanical ability. At least this guy is asking good, valid questions.
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I think there's a way of raising the issue of aggregate failures vs. anecdotal, or whatever, without calling into question the motivate of an expert on the actual matter at hand.
From where I stand questioning motive seems to show a lack of perspective. Even if failures are 1% (at this stage -- most of this engine fleet are not nearly into high mileage territory since this is not a primary vehicle type car) and you're entire profession is built on this 1% then obviously you're going to see the fatal flawes that are coming down the pike well before us arm chair guys. These engines are performance oriented but they're not race engines. Which means we get all the bad of the cost-cutting internally and inherent durability weakness rolled into one out-of-warranty, specialized labor requiring proposition. Don't fool yourself into a false state of confidence simply because a high % of engines didn't crap out early in their odometers.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW
Last edited by Perfectlap; 08-22-2014 at 09:12 AM.
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08-22-2014, 09:31 AM
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#35
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On the slippery slope
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Austin and Palm Springs
Posts: 3,796
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I'd be curious to see how how our M96 fairs on reliability vs other high performance motors from Porsche as well as maybe BMW
I do think many are primary/DD. In all the reading I have done, it does seem that cars that are driven often and harder have fewer problems.
Jake, do you have any empirical data you can share? On a tangent, you have mentioned many modes of failure, I for one am interested in what that list would be, or do we have to eagerly wait for your book?
__________________
2004 Boxster S 6 speed - DRL relay hack, Polaris AutoTop DIY
2004 996 Targa Tip
Instructor - San Diego region
2014 Porsche Performance Driving School
2020 BMW X3, 2013 Ram 1500, 2016 Cmax, 2004 F-150 "Big Red"
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08-22-2014, 10:09 AM
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#36
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Listowel, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,120
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JayG
I'd be curious to see how how our M96 fairs on reliability vs other high performance motors from Porsche as well as maybe BMW
I do think many are primary/DD. In all the reading I have done, it does seem that cars that are driven often and harder have fewer problems.
Jake, do you have any empirical data you can share? On a tangent, you have mentioned many modes of failure, I for one am interested in what that list would be, or do we have to eagerly wait for your book?
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That would be an interesting challenge - but how to measure reliability? Is it simply the fact it starts every time, or is it more related to cost over time or how many times it has to visit the shop/worked on annually? Tough call.
I for one did a lot of research before buying my Box and the one element that did keep popping up in almost everything I read was 'reliability'. These cars, whether new or 12 years old are still considered to be some of the most reliable, period.
Besides, for all this IMS talk - it still could be worse. How many GM cars have they recalled in the past few years? And how many died before they did the recall? So far as I know - no one died of an IMS failure.
__________________
2011 Boxster 987.2 Arctic silver / Black leather, PDK with Sports Chrono Package Plus
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08-22-2014, 10:17 AM
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#37
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On the slippery slope
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Austin and Palm Springs
Posts: 3,796
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Giller
That would be an interesting challenge - but how to measure reliability? Is it simply the fact it starts every time, or is it more related to cost over time or how many times it has to visit the shop/worked on annually? Tough call.
I for one did a lot of research before buying my Box and the one element that did keep popping up in almost everything I read was 'reliability'. These cars, whether new or 12 years old are still considered to be some of the most reliable, period.
Besides, for all this IMS talk - it still could be worse. How many GM cars have they recalled in the past few years? And how many died before they did the recall? So far as I know - no one died of an IMS failure.
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I agree.
I believe that if you "maintain" the Boxster properly, you may not have to "service" it
Lets not forget the Toyota Prius debacle or Ford Explorer rollovers
__________________
2004 Boxster S 6 speed - DRL relay hack, Polaris AutoTop DIY
2004 996 Targa Tip
Instructor - San Diego region
2014 Porsche Performance Driving School
2020 BMW X3, 2013 Ram 1500, 2016 Cmax, 2004 F-150 "Big Red"
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08-22-2014, 10:22 AM
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#38
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 8,709
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but it seems that German cars in general require (as opposed to recommend) that maintenance be kept up dutifully. Ditto for Brittish cars.
Makes me wonder if putting off the expensive maintenance or doing improperly doesn't play a big hand in all of these engine problems. Wereas a $20 jiffy lube, among other inexpensive maintenance items on an American or Japanese car, would prolong durability.
__________________
GT3 Recaro Seats - Boxster Red
GT3 Aero / Carrera 18" 5 spoke / Potenza RE-11
Fabspeed Headers & Noise Maker
BORN: March 2000 - FINLAND
IMS#1 REPLACED: April 2010 - NEW JERSEY -- LNE DUAL ROW
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08-22-2014, 07:22 PM
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#39
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Colorado
Posts: 442
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Perfectlap
but it seems that German cars in general require (as opposed to recommend) that maintenance be kept up dutifully. Ditto for Brittish cars.
Makes me wonder if putting off the expensive maintenance or doing improperly doesn't play a big hand in all of these engine problems. Wereas a $20 jiffy lube, among other inexpensive maintenance items on an American or Japanese car, would prolong durability.
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Mine is a daily driver. I get annoyed when I have to drive my backup Honda Civic to work. Even though the Honda is a LOT easier to drive with the automatic and great gas mileage just under 40, BUT, it reminds me how much fun the Boxster is to drive...and my Box gets around 30mpg commuting. And a few head turns every trip.
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08-23-2014, 05:11 AM
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#40
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Canada
Posts: 487
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As a former owner of an 88 944S I can tell you this. The maintenance cost on engine work is nothing compared to the twin cam 16v. The #1 maintenance work is what is called belts and rollers and pads and tube. This can easily be the same cost or more than the IMS re and re. This also has to be done,every 20 to 30 kms even more if you track the car a lot. My car had 200 kms on it when I sold it. You can do the math.
So ,as a Boxster owner who just had a LN installed at 133 kms and only having to do it once. Makes me a happy guy.:dance:
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99 Boxster sold
88 944S sold
Xpit Formula Four sold
95 Integra Solo I sold
71 Opel GT sold
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