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This went in today -- the only S allocated for the entire
month for this very large Dallas dealership. It seems they are not making many Boxes -- mostly the Crocs. Meteor Gray Cocoa top Full cocoa leather interior (ouch!) Sport seats, leather and heated (manual) Floor mats (how can they charge for these???) Bose Windstop Climate control AC Sport steering wheel Storage box Cayman wheels -- 18s Colored crests (and how can they charge for these, too???) Xenons Sport Chrono (after much pondering) Sport exhaust (Ouch!!!) PCCBs (TRIPLE OUCH!!!) Std suspension -- to leave more choices available later. If any. It's a "tracky" version. And not too poofy. The PASM limits choices down the road and is another big ouch $$$. There you go. Delivery in January, they say. |
That's one tricked-out Box S! Beautiful color combo.
I've read reviews raving about the SpChrono+PASM combo. Never understood the Sport Chrono. The PASM made sense, but you're right, perhaps a PSS9 susp down the road would make things even better. Z. |
don't worry about the rev limit as much as getting the engine temp up before you start shifting about 3K. This means driving for 5-10 minutes before that neelde has come up to 185?
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Really appreciate the input. I had always heard that you can take it up to the redline - but not to exceed. First few "performance" drives I took her on I never went over 5K for fear of hurting my new pride and joy.
Needless to say - I have grown a little in RPMs since this post - and I can't thank you all enough for the knowledge. Now - if only I didn't run out of open road so fast - I could really enjoy her more often! Guess I'll have to join up on the PCA and get some track time in my near future... - C5150 |
Having run the "plain" Box at TWS for two DE's, the ABS
and the PSM can be a bit intrusive. I know I have more to learn about smoothness and as I get better, it should lessen that intrusion. The Sport Chrono, when engaged, dials back those two functions. So I should be able to get better throttle steer when I want it without totally turning off the PSM. Which, for those of you who may not know, is an acronym for "Please Save Me." And I think it re-engages itself the next time the ABS kicks in. Kind of a PIA (you all can figure that one out). As well, it increases the sensitvity of the throttle pedal in the early part of the travel. I am not sure I want that to happen, but it seems some like it, some don't. We will see, I guesss. And in this case, which I am not sure I will like also, I believe it is what will engage the sport exhaust as well. I think I would prefer just a separate switch for that, but I am not sure it comes that way. |
Perfectlap (and others),
To answer you, my considered (and some say considerable) advice is to never, ever run an engine hard or at high rpm from dead cold. As you must know -- even if you went to government (public) schools (not a slam, I did, too) -- metals expand and contract as they heat and cool. And different metals do so at different rates. You engine has aluminum parts, steel parts, plastic parts in all sorts of places. Steel piston rings on aluminum pistons, aluminum block, steel rods and crank, etc. And none of these are sized to run at their optimum performance until they are at their designed, optimum temperature. And that goes for your oil as well. It is the lifeblood of the engine and needs to be at full operatiing temperature before really getting after it. it is heated and cooled by a water to oil heat exchanger and will closely follow the water temp on your gauge. Personally, I let the coolant get up to temp and give it a few more minutes before any full throttle use. As it is heating up, I keep it below 2,000 for a while and slowly to 3,000 or so until it has reached full operating temperature. But that's just me. - Mark PS: I apologize for mis- typing "guesss" on that last post. Clearly I meant "guess." Sorry. |
Regarding the rev history stored in the car's "memory", that Houston C4S commented on, the 986 records two types of events. One being bouncing off the rev limiter and two being an over-rev caused by a downshift. The latter code may negatively affect your reception when submitting a warranty claim to Porsche.
The 987 records rev history in certain high-rev ranges (six levels), with a median range (level 3) being up to 7,900. Regarding shift points: the Power/Torque chart for your model should be in the back of your owners manual, but if you haven't seen it, the attached one shows an 04 986 and an 05 987 which will be similar to your 1997-06. The chart pretty clearly shows what you're missing out on in the Box by shifting early (variocam for example, doesn't kick in until 4200 rpm - one reason they don't want you exceeding this point during break-in). The chart also illustrates Randall's comment that at a certain point in the cycle you'll experience diminishing returns. |
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