Hot Hatch to Boxster/Cayman ?
Discussion
mollytherocker said:
Do you have an egg under your throttle?
You'd think so. The thing with using any car as a daily is you drive accordingly. You don't hard accelerate off every roundabout, you drive when everyone else is on the road meaning traffic limits progress, as you get a bit older you try and develop a more mature driving style. What makes the Cayman such a great car is it does all this, delivers near oil burner efficiency and yet becomes a hoon wagon in an instant. You plan fun routes into mundane journeys and get to use the car more often as intended as a result; for me it's better than having a weekend car.I used to have a tuscan as a toy but had to almost force myself to use it since driving at weekends was the last thing I wanted to do. Gone o/t a bit but it demonstrates to potential buyers just how versatile the modern offerings are, if not as characterful as older cars.
Stuart0688 said:
I really didn't want to hear this lol. Coming from a 198bhp Civic Type R, I hoped a non S model would be good. At the moment I drive the Civic fairly hard and feel I'm using most of it's potential, surely another 65hp would still be fun ?
I was hoping maybe my partner would get a sensible car if I bought a Porsche. At the moment she has a Mini Cooper S, which is probably less space than a Cayman !
Has anyone got any long term real MPG figures ? Over 9500 miles on my trip meter, the Type R did 29.5mpg
My 2005S does well over 30mpg on the motorway, more like 20 around town and less if having a bit of fun. I reckon the Porsche is 10-15% more thirsty than the Civic like for like.I was hoping maybe my partner would get a sensible car if I bought a Porsche. At the moment she has a Mini Cooper S, which is probably less space than a Cayman !
Has anyone got any long term real MPG figures ? Over 9500 miles on my trip meter, the Type R did 29.5mpg
I am sure you will find both the standard car and the S more fun than the Civic. I liked the straight line acceleration of the Civic, but not the steering or the handling particularly. The Boxster is just much better in those areas.
The other thing which I loved and hated about the Civic was the need to really wring it's neck to get to the power. Keeping in the VTEC zone at 6k-8.5k revs is great fun when you are out for a weekend drive with no other cars about, but a bit of a pain if you need to do a quick overtake on your daily commute.
The Boxster still has an engine that you need to work properly to get to the power, but not at quite such high a rev range and there is a reasonable amount of power on tap much earlier for day-to-day driving.
kingston12 said:
Stuart0688 said:
I really didn't want to hear this lol. Coming from a 198bhp Civic Type R, I hoped a non S model would be good. At the moment I drive the Civic fairly hard and feel I'm using most of it's potential, surely another 65hp would still be fun ?
I was hoping maybe my partner would get a sensible car if I bought a Porsche. At the moment she has a Mini Cooper S, which is probably less space than a Cayman !
Has anyone got any long term real MPG figures ? Over 9500 miles on my trip meter, the Type R did 29.5mpg
My 2005S does well over 30mpg on the motorway, more like 20 around town and less if having a bit of fun. I reckon the Porsche is 10-15% more thirsty than the Civic like for like.I was hoping maybe my partner would get a sensible car if I bought a Porsche. At the moment she has a Mini Cooper S, which is probably less space than a Cayman !
Has anyone got any long term real MPG figures ? Over 9500 miles on my trip meter, the Type R did 29.5mpg
I am sure you will find both the standard car and the S more fun than the Civic. I liked the straight line acceleration of the Civic, but not the steering or the handling particularly. The Boxster is just much better in those areas.
The other thing which I loved and hated about the Civic was the need to really wring it's neck to get to the power. Keeping in the VTEC zone at 6k-8.5k revs is great fun when you are out for a weekend drive with no other cars about, but a bit of a pain if you need to do a quick overtake on your daily commute.
The Boxster still has an engine that you need to work properly to get to the power, but not at quite such high a rev range and there is a reasonable amount of power on tap much earlier for day-to-day driving.
hondansx said:
mollytherocker said:
truck71 said:
981 returns over 30 mpg every journey unless being thrashed. Long journeys well into the 40's.
Do you have an egg under your throttle?I went from Meg 250 to 987 S
Obviously the Porsche is more special, even though it was cheaper to buy than the Meg people think you have a £30k plus car
For driving, I dont think the Cayman is any quicker on the road, maybe in a straight line but the modern hatches, particularly the Meg, have amazing grip and handling. Also the Cayman is much longer geared so a different sort of feel altogether than a manic hot hatch.
Obviously the Porsche is more special, even though it was cheaper to buy than the Meg people think you have a £30k plus car
For driving, I dont think the Cayman is any quicker on the road, maybe in a straight line but the modern hatches, particularly the Meg, have amazing grip and handling. Also the Cayman is much longer geared so a different sort of feel altogether than a manic hot hatch.
Stuart0688 said:
Thank you this was really helpful. I do enjoy wringing the Civic engine, so was hoping the 2.7 engine would suit me
I really enjoy my 2008 2.7's engine - it's comfortable to pootle around in town and never go over 2000rpm, or you can really rev it out and get the most from it.Stuart0688 said:
kingston12 said:
Stuart0688 said:
I really didn't want to hear this lol. Coming from a 198bhp Civic Type R, I hoped a non S model would be good. At the moment I drive the Civic fairly hard and feel I'm using most of it's potential, surely another 65hp would still be fun ?
I was hoping maybe my partner would get a sensible car if I bought a Porsche. At the moment she has a Mini Cooper S, which is probably less space than a Cayman !
Has anyone got any long term real MPG figures ? Over 9500 miles on my trip meter, the Type R did 29.5mpg
My 2005S does well over 30mpg on the motorway, more like 20 around town and less if having a bit of fun. I reckon the Porsche is 10-15% more thirsty than the Civic like for like.I was hoping maybe my partner would get a sensible car if I bought a Porsche. At the moment she has a Mini Cooper S, which is probably less space than a Cayman !
Has anyone got any long term real MPG figures ? Over 9500 miles on my trip meter, the Type R did 29.5mpg
I am sure you will find both the standard car and the S more fun than the Civic. I liked the straight line acceleration of the Civic, but not the steering or the handling particularly. The Boxster is just much better in those areas.
The other thing which I loved and hated about the Civic was the need to really wring it's neck to get to the power. Keeping in the VTEC zone at 6k-8.5k revs is great fun when you are out for a weekend drive with no other cars about, but a bit of a pain if you need to do a quick overtake on your daily commute.
The Boxster still has an engine that you need to work properly to get to the power, but not at quite such high a rev range and there is a reasonable amount of power on tap much earlier for day-to-day driving.
Having said that it should be! I bought my EP3 new in 2004 for £16k and I always thought that was cheap for the engine and gearbox alone, so anything else was a bonus. The invoice price of my Porsche was £50k, over three times the price, so I'd be worried if it is not much better.
Now they are both changing hands for silly money, I think that the Boxster is the biggest bargain out there, but the Civic is excellent value as well.
I swapped from a 325i Touring to a new Cayman. I need the Touring for work but after a job change it meant no more lugging boxes about.
Five months and seven thousand miles later I've no regrets regarding the Cayman's luggage space. Two suitcases fit up front and cabin baggage and coats etc in the back. The only thing I have missed is the BMW had two handy hooks in the boot to hang carrier bags from on the way home from Waitrose, the Cayman just empties the contents of the bags over the boot as I enjoy my drive home!
Five months and seven thousand miles later I've no regrets regarding the Cayman's luggage space. Two suitcases fit up front and cabin baggage and coats etc in the back. The only thing I have missed is the BMW had two handy hooks in the boot to hang carrier bags from on the way home from Waitrose, the Cayman just empties the contents of the bags over the boot as I enjoy my drive home!
1991 Jetta 16v:
To 2001 Boxster, ok, so I couldn't get an A series engine in the Boxster's boot (smooth case gearbox went in though), a sprite exhaust mid pipe went in the cabin with no issues.The power wasn't overwhelming, the handling was fun in a different way. I loved the early morning blasts to the train station, hell, if milk was needed, I was your man.
Miss that car..
I put 23,000 miles on it in 2 years, had the rear window snap in two(Porsche replaced it free of charge), got through 2 sets of Michelin Pilots (thank you Micheldever).
To 2001 Boxster, ok, so I couldn't get an A series engine in the Boxster's boot (smooth case gearbox went in though), a sprite exhaust mid pipe went in the cabin with no issues.The power wasn't overwhelming, the handling was fun in a different way. I loved the early morning blasts to the train station, hell, if milk was needed, I was your man.
Miss that car..
I put 23,000 miles on it in 2 years, had the rear window snap in two(Porsche replaced it free of charge), got through 2 sets of Michelin Pilots (thank you Micheldever).
Tweaked (255bhp) Megane R26 to 986 Boxster S in my case.
They are quite different cars to own and drive and both have their good points. The 986 has a nominal 260bhp and they are approximately the same weight, but the turbo delivery of the Megane and a few other factors made it quicker point to point especially over B roads. That was almost its downside though as you could pedal it really quite quickly with not very much effort or involvement (more involvement was possible but at high pace levels). By contrast the Porsche involves you more, makes you work more for the road, has nicer controls and I find more enjoyable because of it. In poor conditions I would rather have the Renault.
Aside from some of the practicality considerations (seats, boot space), the Porsche is surprisingly spacious with the front and rear compartments and much more so than most 2 seat convertibles.
Long term I averaged 26.5mpg in the R26 and currently on 23.9mpg in the Boxster. The Boxster will return low 30s on cruise at motorway speeds, pushing it hard or town driving appears to be high teens or low 20s.
They are quite different cars to own and drive and both have their good points. The 986 has a nominal 260bhp and they are approximately the same weight, but the turbo delivery of the Megane and a few other factors made it quicker point to point especially over B roads. That was almost its downside though as you could pedal it really quite quickly with not very much effort or involvement (more involvement was possible but at high pace levels). By contrast the Porsche involves you more, makes you work more for the road, has nicer controls and I find more enjoyable because of it. In poor conditions I would rather have the Renault.
Aside from some of the practicality considerations (seats, boot space), the Porsche is surprisingly spacious with the front and rear compartments and much more so than most 2 seat convertibles.
Long term I averaged 26.5mpg in the R26 and currently on 23.9mpg in the Boxster. The Boxster will return low 30s on cruise at motorway speeds, pushing it hard or town driving appears to be high teens or low 20s.
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