2010 Cayman s or 2005 911 s
2010 Cayman s or 2005 911 s
Author
Discussion

aeales123

Original Poster:

21 posts

105 months

Monday 12th June 2017
quotequote all
Hi guys. I have 25k to spend on a new car. I've always dreamed about a Porsche but am open to ideas. I've driven a regular Cayman (not S) and thought it was great. I've also driven a TTRS plus but it had horrid road noise and didn't feel as special, it was mega fast though.

Any advice would be great :-).

Heaveho

6,755 posts

197 months

Monday 12th June 2017
quotequote all
I'd take the Cayman in a straight fight between the two Porsches you mention, largely because it'll be a Gen 2 at 2010, and have an engine with very few, if any, known issues. The same can't be said of the engine in a 2005 911 sadly. I suspect you'd find a Cayman S within your budget, if not, you could consider the equivalent Boxster S, you'd get a great low mileage car for that.

Edited by Heaveho on Monday 12th June 23:39

aeales123

Original Poster:

21 posts

105 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
quotequote all
Amazing thanks for the advice. People are telling me that 911's won't despreciate and that the Cayman will but I'm not sure that I'm too concerned. I also see a lot of 911's with rebuilt engines. Would you take a boxter over a Cayman?

Heaveho

6,755 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
quotequote all
Well, I've already got a Boxster, but it's a 2005 3.2S........it's arguably the best compromise for reliability, performance and resale value for that period of Boxster. I'd have a later one, just can't stretch to it at the mo!

I like Caymans, and if they did a 3.2, I'd probably have one, but the early ones were either 2.7 or 3.4. I won't take a chance on a 3.4, too many stories, and I'm not sure how easy a 2.7 would be to sell on.

If I were in the market for a 2010 car, I don't think I'd mind whether I ended up with a 3.4 Boxster or Cayman, the engines are known to be more robust. Nothing wrong with the 2.9, but when they're seemingly both as reliable as each other, no reason not to go for the bigger engine if finances allow.

aeales123

Original Poster:

21 posts

105 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
quotequote all
Great advice thanks for your help.

Heaveho

6,755 posts

197 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
quotequote all
No probs, there are others on here who know more than me about the subject, if you're lucky they might show up with some more advice. All the best with the search.

Yidwann

1,872 posts

233 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
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I had a Cayman S, and I loved it, and miss it a lot! It would get my vote over the 911 you mention, if you can get a 2010 S, then it'll be a 987 gen II and as suggested, the problems with the earlier 3.4's (IMS/Bore Scoring) should be non exsistant.

aeales123

Original Poster:

21 posts

105 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
quotequote all
This is all great advice thank you. For me it seems like take depreciation in the Cayman or higher running costs of a 911 and I think I'd rather have the better technical car which I think is the Cayman.

Yidwann

1,872 posts

233 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
quotequote all
It was something I considered too, I found the best one I could at the price point I had in mind, I had it for 18 months, had to sell it to fund a house purchase, but in 18 months, I sold it for the same money I bought it for. You'll be bang smack in the middle with a 2010 model where you'll have to expect depreciation, but offset that with a later model 987 that should see no issues.

I was still in the mindset that you read forums, only ever hear from people with issues etc etc, how many cars are out there with no issues whatsoever? But you can't rule out the issues totally, they do exsist.

nickfrog

24,207 posts

240 months

Tuesday 13th June 2017
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I was in a similar position exactly 15 years ago. 993 or Boxster. Driving both quickly made me realise I preferred the handing of a mid-engine car.