718 Cayman GT4 PPF?

718 Cayman GT4 PPF?

Author
Discussion

FBIBARRY

Original Poster:

4 posts

46 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
Hi everybody,

I have a Cayman GT4 on order for mid June and I was wondering whether it would be a good idea to get PPF on it?

This is my first Porsche I have owned and have never had PPF on any car.

I would appreciate any suggestions or comments from people who could maybe give me some advice.

Thank you very much

Taylor

av185

19,471 posts

134 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
Complete waste of money imo.

Just don't use on inappropriate roads or conditions e.g heavily salted.

NelsonM3

1,718 posts

178 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
av185 said:
Complete waste of money imo.

Just don't use on inappropriate roads or conditions e.g heavily salted.
Why do you feel it is a waste of money? Surely however the OP plans on using the car dictates that?

andyvvc

242 posts

150 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
NelsonM3 said:
Why do you feel it is a waste of money? Surely however the OP plans on using the car dictates that?
Indeed. If the OP decides to something other than driving and enjoying his new purchase, then he will need PPF.

Intends to drive and enjoy the car for what it was intended = No PPF
Car is owned by ecain63 and is driven as-intended + tracked + driven even more = PPF
Will be fearful of a few paint chips = PPF
Believes all the PPF based sales pitches = PPF
Paranoid about causing depreciation due to stone chips = PPF
Worried that loads of YouTubers talk about PPF as if it is the second coming = PPF
Listens to those on here who love PPF (but hardly drive their cars) = PPF

I'm sure the OP gets the picture :O)





Edited by andyvvc on Tuesday 5th January 09:30

Rojibo

1,746 posts

84 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
Where are you based OP?

I had mine done, full front, sides and ceramic coated for £2,800. I am tracking the car so wanted a bit more protection, it cost very little compared to the overall cost of the car...

culpz

4,932 posts

119 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
It's definitely not what I'd call a waste of money; especially if you're someone who likes to keep their cars in tip-top nick. It's not for me personally, as i don't really care about the odd stone chip and such anymore, but i can imagine on a car like that why you might wanna keep it in the best condition possible.

av185

19,471 posts

134 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
culpz said:
It's definitely not what I'd call a waste of money; especially if you're someone who likes to keep their cars in tip-top nick. It's not for me personally, as i don't really care about the odd stone chip and such anymore, but i can imagine on a car like that why you might wanna keep it in the best condition possible.
PPF doesn't totally protect the car from stone chips though.....contrary to popular belief.

And it can actually look worse depending on the stone chip.

Also can restrict resale in some cases especially as many applications are below par.

Most buyers including myself would prefer an original unmolested unwrapped cared for Porsche GT everytime.



Rojibo

1,746 posts

84 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
av185 said:
Most buyers including myself would prefer an original unmolested unwrapped cared for Porsche GT everytime.
What was your sample size on this survey?

_Neal_

2,781 posts

226 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
av185 said:
PPF doesn't totally protect the car from stone chips though.....contrary to popular belief.

And it can actually look worse depending on the stone chip.

Also can restrict resale in some cases especially as many applications are below par.

Most buyers including myself would prefer an original unmolested unwrapped cared for Porsche GT everytime.
We're just talking about clear protective film not a full wrap, right? In which case surely just have it professionally removed if it looks tatty, leave it on if it doesn't? Can't see how it would restrict resale at all - it's hardly "molesting" the car is it?

That said, I'm not sure I'd have it applied to any car I bought - cost seems excessive given the limited advantages. Ignoring the fact that my cars are all second hand and pre-stone chipped anyway biggrin


Miserablegit

4,174 posts

116 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
I have it on one of the toys - it has certainly protected the front end from stone chips so it was money well spent. I’d rather have PPF than have to book it in for a front end respray each year but each to their own.

mcflurry

9,136 posts

260 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
Rojibo said:
I had mine done, full front, sides and ceramic coated for £2,800. I am tracking the car so wanted a bit more protection, it cost very little compared to the overall cost of the car...
Wouldn't putting the car on a track have 10 times more issues than stonechips wink

Chubbyross

4,635 posts

92 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
Rojibo said:
av185 said:
Most buyers including myself would prefer an original unmolested unwrapped cared for Porsche GT everytime.
What was your sample size on this survey?
N=1

ecain63

10,590 posts

182 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
I'm not a GT owner, not even a Porsche owner..... but I have PPF on my car and have done on previous cars too.

Here's why I think it's a no-brainer on your car, based on experiences in my last 3 cars:

In 5 years I have spent circa £8k on PPF. I can hand on heart say that I've been saved from at least £12k of paint repairs as a result...... and the condition of the paint under the PPF is much better come sale time than it would be without it.

Of course, you may not have any bad luck and you may not do a lot of miles. But, if you're like me and you do trackdays, shopping, holidays etc in your car then I would say it's 100% worth it.



culpz

4,932 posts

119 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
av185 said:
culpz said:
It's definitely not what I'd call a waste of money; especially if you're someone who likes to keep their cars in tip-top nick. It's not for me personally, as i don't really care about the odd stone chip and such anymore, but i can imagine on a car like that why you might wanna keep it in the best condition possible.
PPF doesn't totally protect the car from stone chips though.....contrary to popular belief.

And it can actually look worse depending on the stone chip.

Also can restrict resale in some cases especially as many applications are below par.

Most buyers including myself would prefer an original unmolested unwrapped cared for Porsche GT everytime.
What does it do then?

As already stated, it's not permanent. Surely it's no harder than having a wrap removed, and usually most people only have it done on areas particularly prone to paint damage, so it's not like the full car has been done. Wouldn't have thought it would put people off, either. More the opposite, i would imagine.

As i said, it's not for me, but i can see why others might see it as a good idea.

The Surveyor

7,584 posts

244 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
OP, are you buying the car or leasing it?

If you're leasing it, at the end of the term they will expect some normal stone-chipping so don't waste your money keeping it perfect for the next owner.

If you're buying the car with a view to keeping it, cherishing it and retaining as much value as possible, only you will know if the kind of driving you'll be doing will cause more damage than £2,800 worth of PPF will save. Personally cheap or badly applied PPF looks terrible stands out a mile and certainly looks worse than a normal splattering of road-rash. The better PPF is expensive to the point that occasional front-end resprays become more economic.

FBIBARRY

Original Poster:

4 posts

46 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
Hi everybody

Thank you for all of the comments. I am still deciding whether to have PPF done. I am in Leicester and have contacted multiple places about PPF but their figures are £2500 + just for the front... Does anybody know any reputable PPF companies based in Leicester? I am looking to pay not much more than £1000 as I cannot see the value in PPF.

Thanks

Taylor

andyvvc

242 posts

150 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
ecain63 said:
In 5 years I have spent circa £8k on PPF. I can hand on heart say that I've been saved from at least £12k of paint repairs as a result......

What have you been doing to possibly warrant 12k in paint repairs in 5 years...? Or do you mean that after year one a front-end respray is needed due to paint chips which you find unsightly. (Repeated each year over 5 years = 12k?)




Rojibo

1,746 posts

84 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
FBIBARRY said:
Hi everybody

Thank you for all of the comments. I am still deciding whether to have PPF done. I am in Leicester and have contacted multiple places about PPF but their figures are £2500 + just for the front... Does anybody know any reputable PPF companies based in Leicester? I am looking to pay not much more than £1000 as I cannot see the value in PPF.

Thanks

Taylor
Not that local to you, but the PPF for my 718 GT4 was £1750 for the front end, from Invisible Patterns up near Manchester. They’ve done an excellent job.

I doubt you’ll get much of anything for £1000.

FBIBARRY

Original Poster:

4 posts

46 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
The Surveyor said:
OP, are you buying the car or leasing it?

If you're leasing it, at the end of the term they will expect some normal stone-chipping so don't waste your money keeping it perfect for the next owner.

If you're buying the car with a view to keeping it, cherishing it and retaining as much value as possible, only you will know if the kind of driving you'll be doing will cause more damage than £2,800 worth of PPF will save. Personally cheap or badly applied PPF looks terrible stands out a mile and certainly looks worse than a normal splattering of road-rash. The better PPF is expensive to the point that occasional front-end resprays become more economic.
I am purchasing the car. I am not going to be doing a lot of mileage per year and so I am leaning towards little to no PPF as I feel I will not incur damages of over £2000.


thatsprettyshady

3,785 posts

172 months

Monday 4th January 2021
quotequote all
my friend didn't get PPF on his 781 GT4 - a couple of months and one front end respray later he decided to get the whole car done as its was cheaper I n the long run.