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Old 09-03-2013, 06:17 PM   #21
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Well I should have said no bearings like an 09+ DFi engine. The bearing are the enemy within. The LNE Solution for single bearing cars uses no ball bearings, thus you never have to deal with IMS issue ever again. But the cost is higher obviously.
Got it...thanks!

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Old 09-03-2013, 06:20 PM   #22
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Whereabouts in SoCal are you ?
I live in Ventura Co. Got to drive the Cayman in the mountains behind Thousand Oaks and Moorpark.
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Old 09-03-2013, 06:41 PM   #23
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I live in Ventura Co. Got to drive the Cayman in the mountains behind Thousand Oaks and Moorpark.
If there are no more cars to test drive nearby , pm me .
There is an 03 here you can try any time you want .
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Old 09-03-2013, 08:32 PM   #24
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If you want to really make a mistake, go drive a 2014 Cayman S.


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Old 09-04-2013, 03:28 AM   #25
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Or take a drive in the Flat 6/ LN "Cayman X" with a full 4.2 liters of fury, based on the 9a1 DFI power plant.
:-)
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Old 09-04-2013, 07:09 AM   #26
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If you want to really make a mistake, go drive a 2014 Cayman S.


/
I did on the infield roadrace course in Fontana CA up to 100 mph. Was it more comfortable to ride in than my 2000 3.6 Box S ? Yes. Easier to drive? Yes. Better suspension? Yes. Feel like I was cheating with PDK & other driver aids? Yes. Would I trade 4 of my cars for it? Heck NO!
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Old 09-04-2013, 06:32 PM   #27
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Cars in general, including Porsches, hit a depreciation drop in yr 4. Maybe because warranties are running out. The 09's will be hitting that drop this yr.

However, there was this little thing called a recession that hit in 08 and it drastically affected sales of the 09 Caymans. 08 Cayman sales were in the 20K units while 09 Cayman sales were less than 2K. With a more desirable motor and substantially fewer 09s in circulation, the laws of supply and demand take over. Chances are the 09s will hold their value better than other yrs.

PerfectLap mentions the IMSB in an 06-08 Cayman will fail at some pt. He mentions it happening after 100K mi. If you make it to or past 100K mi, is it really a design flaw? My point is a 987.1 is a reliable car. There are plenty of 06s that are now getting into the 100K mi category. The 987s with the M97 engine were not included in the Porsche settlement because they don't break IMSs at a substantial rate. Don't discount buying a 987.1 because of IMS.
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Old 09-04-2013, 06:44 PM   #28
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Drive a 2004 Ferrari 360 Challenge Stradale and you'll forget all about the Cayman.
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Old 09-04-2013, 07:12 PM   #29
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Originally Posted by husker boxster View Post

PerfectLap mentions the IMSB in an 06-08 Cayman will fail at some pt. He mentions it happening after 100K mi. If you make it to or past 100K mi, is it really a design flaw?
If the engine would easily survive well past 100k if not for the bearing then I would call that a design flawe. And by survive I mean an engine that could be rebuilt without having to contend with the sort of carnage you often get with IMS failures. And using a sealed bearing where oil starvation could lead to this much destruction was inherently flawed engineering. Servicing a bearing by only one means, engine splitting, when already built cars don't need this added expense, is head-scratching engineering. To me it says they didn't really investigate the cause of failures but instead chose to concentrate on raising the level of tolerance before failure.

P.s.
I agree with you entirely on peak credit crisis cars holding value, so as long as interest rates remain low. But Bernanke seems to be telling us that the saying "all good things must come to an end" is about to come true. I would be selling real soon if i dont plan to keep a soon to be out of warranty car. Which means if I'm a buyer I'm waiting until next year or at least depositing the cash from a loan now to use later when loans get harder to get for the same rates and amounts.
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Last edited by Perfectlap; 09-04-2013 at 07:27 PM.
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Old 09-04-2013, 07:54 PM   #30
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BUY GOLD !!! BUY GOLD !!!



The amount of guys on here with "LN" in the signatures is astonishing .
Are you really trying to say "I'm smarter than porsche , and smarter than you ... Look at me !!! " Lmao

Yet in the same sentence bemoaning the porsche they own being a mass produced "disposable car" ...

It really is ridiculous .

Porsche have allways been about "evolution not revolution" , yet many big-up there older cars at the expense of the far superior later cars .., why is that ?
Ego self pleasure ?
Listen to your mummy ... That will make you blind you know .

Porsche "problems" have been going on for years , yet overall they are great cars .
Car guys simply learn about the issues , deal with them , and move on .
No crying .
No bull .
No Internet expertise .
Just drive them and have fun ...

:ah:
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Old 03-20-2014, 10:46 AM   #31
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Ims

Is it fair on the consumer, I mean the used car consumer, the guy who saves for years to buy his first Porsche, the guy who cannot bear the cost of a new engine, the guy who sees bog standard ill maintained Fords lasting well over 200,000 miles and has NO idea of the hazards when purchasing what he is told is one of the finest engineered cars made.

It is a scandal when ONE small bearing failure can totally wreck an engine, if the failure numbers in the 987 are so small Porsche should be prepared to replace all those engines, the last fix by Porsche has condemned future owners of those mid 2005-2009 cars to an extremely expensive repair when that bearing shows any signs of wear and it will.

Perhaps someone can inform me of any other manufacturer using this type of bearing within the confines of their engine. If Porsche cared about their second user customers they would never have inserted a bearing they knew would fail at ANY time and could NOT be replaced at reasonable cost.

I am UK retired, I sold my late 2005 Boxster S with 15,000 miles and the final IMS fix, It was a summer car doing about 2,000 per year, it was a ticking time bomb, If it had been an early cheap to fix 2005 car I would never have sold it.
I now have a Gen2 2.9 car with NO DFI, can`t get carbon buildup on this engine.
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Old 03-20-2014, 10:48 AM   #32
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Old 03-20-2014, 04:43 PM   #33
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Am I reading that the 987.1 and 997.1 are less desirable when compared to older cars? I thought the imsb in these cars did not self destruct at the rate of the older ones. Anyway, I am for buying the Ferrari challenge stradale or a 996TT. It's rare that I have had the pedal to the metal in my TT. In my boxster it was much much more frequent.
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Old 03-21-2014, 04:40 AM   #34
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Drive a 2004 Ferrari 360 Challenge Stradale and you'll forget all about the Cayman.
360CS still commands big money vs the Modena.

This article does have a point...

Could an Old Ferrari be a Better Deal than a New 911? | 6SpeedOnline.com
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Old 03-21-2014, 04:43 AM   #35
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Funny how everybody recommends IMS-less, DFI engines yet nobody mentions about the dirty valves issue that plagues ALL DFI engines in North America. Go read on VW, Audi, BMW forums people...

Grass is greener on the other side.
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Old 03-21-2014, 06:59 AM   #36
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360CS still commands big money vs the Modena.

This article does have a point...

Could an Old Ferrari be a Better Deal than a New 911? | 6SpeedOnline.com
As long as you don't drive it. A new 911 is a workhorse. Ferrari is show piece. with pretty poor build quality for the price if you look at some of the Ferrari forums. One guy on there who has his own lift and does all his own work (has a 996 too) posts about how sloppily the product is put together by the Ferari mechanics once you start getting under there. As far as durability, you basically have to pony up for the track versions if you want a car that can come close to a Porsche on build quality. And high mileage Ferraris are rare birds. I saw one post by a 430 owner I believe where the mechanics all came out to look a Ferrari that had ~70K miles. They'd never see such a thing.

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Funny how everybody recommends IMS-less, DFI engines yet nobody mentions about the dirty valves issue that plagues ALL DFI engines in North America. Go read on VW, Audi, BMW forums people...

Grass is greener on the other side.
I think about this. I never thought I'd own this car for over a decade. But it seems like a "The devil you know" more than "the grass is greener". Unless Porsche slap a flat 8 into a Boxster I'm not sure I would buy a newer Porsche on the basis of additional HP. But I did read somehwere the VW chief was driving around in a 981 Cayman with a flat 8.
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Old 05-28-2015, 02:38 AM   #37
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Clarification?

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Clarification: not all 09 motors are the same. You want a 09.2 late production motor. If it has PDK, it has he new motor for sure...
That is not clarification, it's obfuscation. It they're not all the same, how are they different? How is an 09.2 late production (does 09.2=late production?) determined? Please clarify.
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Old 05-28-2015, 03:26 AM   #38
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Midway through 2009 Porsche changed the motor design and added PDK. The revised motor has direct injection (if I'm not mistaken) and no longer has an IMS.
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Old 05-28-2015, 03:40 AM   #39
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OP mentions an original plan of buying a $12Kish car (early 986) and the advice has worked its way up to buying a Ferrari 360CS?

Heck, why not just get a FGT?
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Old 05-28-2015, 06:15 AM   #40
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian c View Post
BUY GOLD !!! BUY GOLD !!!



The amount of guys on here with "LN" in the signatures is astonishing .
Are you really trying to say "I'm smarter than porsche , and smarter than you ... Look at me !!! " Lmao

Yet in the same sentence bemoaning the porsche they own being a mass produced "disposable car" ...

It really is ridiculous .

Porsche have allways been about "evolution not revolution" , yet many big-up there older cars at the expense of the far superior later cars .., why is that ?
Ego self pleasure ?
Listen to your mummy ... That will make you blind you know .

Porsche "problems" have been going on for years , yet overall they are great cars .
Car guys simply learn about the issues , deal with them , and move on .
No crying .
No bull .
No Internet expertise .
Just drive them and have fun ...

:ah:
3.5 years of reading on this forum ,I would tell someone to read this post. Everything I own is maintenance and they ALL have weak points

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