Is a old low mile Cayenne Turbo a bad idea?

Is a old low mile Cayenne Turbo a bad idea?

Author
Discussion

Crazy4557

Original Poster:

689 posts

201 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
quotequote all
I've decided to be sensible after a health scare and start driving a 4x4 that's not going to lose a fortune every year. I currently run a FFRR 5.0SC that I bought new in December last year but I can offload this for almost what I paid for it surprisingly.
I have seen an early low mileage Cayenne Turbo locally, I've had a couple before and really enjoyed the drive and their performance if not their looks.

As the title say's, is a low miler going to ruin me more than a recent RR's depreciation? It's going to be just as fast, going to be a better drive almost certainly but the interior will be a step or two down.
What are the major known issues that I should check that have been carried out in the past? I do plan to have it inspected by a Porsche indie for peace of mind.

Cayenneand996

750 posts

270 months

Wednesday 22nd February 2017
quotequote all
I purchased a low mileage Cayenne Turbo SA and its been a great car

There are a few things you need to look out for, what year car are you considering buying - the list is year dependant

p1stonhead

27,203 posts

174 months

Wednesday 22nd February 2017
quotequote all
Crazy4557 said:
I've decided to be sensible after a health scare and start driving a 4x4 that's not going to lose a fortune every year. I currently run a FFRR 5.0SC that I bought new in December last year but I can offload this for almost what I paid for it surprisingly.
I have seen an early low mileage Cayenne Turbo locally, I've had a couple before and really enjoyed the drive and their performance if not their looks.

As the title say's, is a low miler going to ruin me more than a recent RR's depreciation? It's going to be just as fast, going to be a better drive almost certainly but the interior will be a step or two down.
What are the major known issues that I should check that have been carried out in the past? I do plan to have it inspected by a Porsche indie for peace of mind.
If you are running a SC range rover I am sure you can handle it.
My old MD had one from new. This can presumably happen to any car with the same system but from what I remember the air suspsension was very complicated and often went wrong.
At one of the services he needed to have the air suspension overhauled. I think the total bill inc service was £4k....


Crazy4557

Original Poster:

689 posts

201 months

Thursday 23rd February 2017
quotequote all
Cayenneand996 said:
I purchased a low mileage Cayenne Turbo SA and its been a great car

There are a few things you need to look out for, what year car are you considering buying - the list is year dependant
Looking at 04 model.

unclepezza

790 posts

150 months

Monday 27th February 2017
quotequote all
What is the mileage, how low and whats the service record like, mileage based or time based as that plays a part?

Loads of little things can go wrong or stop working on them from my experience (owned 2 turbos), also have to say that my 06 plate car was much more reliable than my 04 plate, both on similar mileage weirdly.

Both loved petrol and Mobil 1, but took everything that was thrown at it.


PLASTIC COOLANT pipes is the big one, have they been replaced with the metal ones.
Gas Struts
PCM units
Amps
driveshafts
air suspension comp

Discs and pads need a close look at along with tyres, as the car is heavy on those so you need to factor in replacement costs of those in purchase price if they need doing or will need doing shortly.