RE: Porsche Boxster Spyder: Driven

RE: Porsche Boxster Spyder: Driven

Sunday 6th December 2015

Porsche Boxster Spyder: Driven

A Boxster pared back and designed for sunnier climes, tested in Wales. In November...



Don't ask what it's like with the roof down. A November weekend in Wales, Rally GB weekend in fact, is not the best place to test a Porsche Boxster without the roof. When it wasn't lashing down with rain, the skies were dark and angry, seemingly ready to drop another deluge on some pillock with their Porsche roadster. [No excuses - get back out there! Ed.]

Not exactly its natural habitat!
Not exactly its natural habitat!
So the roof stayed up for our weekend with the car. It was lowered, just to test the "suitable for everyday use" claim. [See above - Ed.] Then it couldn't be raised again, just as the clouds were drawing in once more. Oh. A quick YouTube tutorial revealed it was user error rather than anything overly difficult in the design, but it's worth being completely up to speed with its operation before heading off on a top-down drive. Certainly it's a marked improvement on the previous Spyder though.

Also ensure you have a good gawp at the Spyder with the roof down too, because it really is a beautiful car. The 981 Boxster already looks good but the Spyder takes it to mini-supercar territory, the lower ride height, those rear buttresses and ducktail spoiler making the shape even more dramatic. It looks superb in fact.

Of course it's not quite as stunning with the roof up, but it's arguably more cohesive than the last car and far from ugly. The test car had a reversing camera too, so even the iffy rear visibility wasn't too much of an issue.

Boxster goes glamorous!
Boxster goes glamorous!
Mean, if not roofless
Far more importantly though, the Boxster Spyder is certainly liveable with the roof up. Yes, there's a fair amount more wind noise than in a regular Boxster, to the point where you will think something isn't quite closed initially. It is a surprise, but you soon get used to it. Moreover, at no point did the Boxster feel vulnerable in the very worst that Storm Abigail could throw at it; 180mph felt like it would challenge the roof less! The point being that you could live with the Boxster Spyder and its roof everyday should you want to.

You really will want to as well, because the Boxster is magnificent to drive. It's important to remember the Boxster Spyder is not a Cayman GT4 with a fancy roof though; it isn't a GT department car and lacks the GT3 front suspension and the adjustable anti-roll bars. Instead it's best to consider it as a prettier, faster, fractionally lighter Boxster GTS. Hardly a bad thing, right?

The powertrain is worth discussing first, because it's simply tremendous. The Spyder is 10hp down on the GT4 but 25kg lighter too, so the acceleration feels identical. With 400cc more swept capacity than a GTS, it's the torque advantage that's most immediately obvious; the car is happy to bimble along in sixth at low speed and pulls with real conviction in fourth and fifth.

20mm lower ride height means great stance
20mm lower ride height means great stance
Geared to the max
But why leave it in a higher gear when there's a great manual gearbox - no PDK is offered on the Boxster Spyder - and nearly 8,000 revs to use? Drop down to third (or second when you remember how fast third will take you) and revel in the glorious response and beautiful yowl of that 3.8-litre flat-six. Yes, it isn't as feral as a GT3 engine at higher engine speed. But it would be absurd to expect any better for £60K. You can't imagine manual, naturally aspirated sports cars will be around for much longer and this is a fantastic reminder of why they will be so sorely missed.

The manual suits the Spyder's slightly old-fashioned nature well. During Friday afternoon rush hour on the M3 it does become tiresome, but such is the reward on an open stretch of road that those gripes simply cease to matter. Everything is sited perfectly and it becomes one of those manuals you change gear in for the sake of it. There's life in the old technology yet.

Furthermore, this Boxster Spyder was tested on the passive suspension set up, proving that a Porsche really doesn't need the PASM adaptive suspension so many are optioned with. They do a superb job of keeping body movements in check while also retaining very good ride comfort on 20-inch wheels. Unsurprisingly it slots in just between a GTS and GT4 in terms of dynamics; more dialled into the surface and agile than the former but lacking the stunning precision and feedback of the latter. Certainly at turn-in the GT4 feels more eager than this Boxster, and there is of course the Cayman's additional rigidity to consider also. But at this price point and amongst its rivals the Boxster is supreme, making the F-Type and SLK55 look rather cumbersome indeed. A comparison with an Exige Roadster seems the most logical twin test, one that we would love to conduct in sunnier climes.

Manual and manual only - hurrah!
Manual and manual only - hurrah!
But even in appalling conditions, the grip, communication and excitement of the Spyder is enthralling. The brakes are excellent, allowing you to slow with real confidence and use them to make small adjustments through a corner as well. There's also a lovely window before the driving assists intervene where the diff can be felt just tightening the line out of a bend. The limits may be high, but it's entertaining enough below them that you won't mind. And should you find yourself at a wide, empty junction with the traction control off, the Boxster is more than happy to indulge...

R'd work if you can get it
Chasing Ben in the PH Fleet Golf R after the photoshoot, the Boxster is brilliant. It's wet, foggy and bumpy, with Ben also having the advantage of four-wheel drive and some local knowledge too. What he gains on corner exit is reclaimed under brakes and the car remains totally composed, alert and pretty mega actually. That won't be forgotten for a very long time.

Once Wales is many miles behind, the Spyder will mooch along the M4 in great comfort, heated seat on and Bluetooth phone conversations conducted without any fuss. The roof really is that liveable!

Dramatic car, dramatic scenery too...
Dramatic car, dramatic scenery too...
Of course it's not perfect. While the seats are great, taller drivers may find their legs a little cramped. £1,595 for 'GT Silver metallic' seems a bit steep. And you suspect people will still get a bit sniffy about it not being a 911.

Ignore that. Ignore them. The Boxster Spyder is a tremendous car, one that's markedly more stylish, desirable, accomplished and characterful than an already very good standard product. At £60,459 the Spyder is £6,587 more than a GTS and worth every single penny. This car here is £69,702, thanks to options such as the 'Spyder Classic interior package' (£1,445), PCM at £2,141 and the digital radio (£324, cheeky buggers). But even at that money, the Spyder deserves great praise. It looks better than a 911, is more capable than an F-Type and could you really buy an AMG SLK instead? Say what you like about the SUV and saloon cash cows - the Spyder proves unequivocally that Porsche can still make world class sports cars.


PORSCHE BOXSTER SPYDER
Engine: 3,800cc flat-six
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 375@6,700rpm
Torque (lb ft): 310@4,750-6,000rpm
0-62mph: 4.5sec 
Top speed: 180mph
Weight: 1,315kg (unladen)
MPG: 28.5
CO2: 230g/km
Price: £69,702 (Basic list of £60,459 plus £1,595 for GT Silver metallic paint, £1,445 for Spyder interior package, £563 for wheels painted satin platinum, £518 for Two-zone automatic climate control, £2,141 for Porsche Communication Management (PCM) including satellite navigation, £284 for heated seats, £801 for BOSE Surround system, £446 for reversing camera, £527 for Telephone module for PCM, £324 for digital radio, £477 for Black finish Bi-Xenon headlights with Porsche Dynamic Lighting System (PDLS) and £122 for ISOFIX front passenger seat mountings)







Photos: Ben Lowden

Author
Discussion

TbirdX

Original Poster:

115 posts

113 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
While not a spyder, I was in my 987 that weekend, no roof down action for me either :-(

stephen300o

15,464 posts

228 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
The Boxster gets better looking every year, as the 911 gets uglier. Maybe trying to help folks not miss the 911 when its gone.

andrewparker

8,014 posts

187 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Absolutely love these. Think it would be my number one sports car choice at the moment.

Krikkit

26,527 posts

181 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Saw one of these a few weeks ago near Chester - parked up and absolutely filthy in that glorious yellow. Gawped at it for a good eyeful; a very handsome car indeed.

Beaver

961 posts

284 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
"Furthermore, this Boxster Spyder was tested on the passive suspension set up, rather than the Porsche Active Suspension Management (PASM) that so many will surely be optioned with. You don't need it"

You can't have it any other way - PASM is not available on this car..

Ares

11,000 posts

120 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
There is a white one that lives near me. It looks & sounds fabulous.

clowesy

293 posts

121 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
This over a GT4 for me.

dlockhart

434 posts

172 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
I have the opinion that Boxsters are the best convertible Porsche make and this article reads to me that this is the best Boxster going.

Why would any one buy a 991 conv?

Matt Bird

1,450 posts

205 months

PH Reportery Lad

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Beaver said:
"Furthermore, this Boxster Spyder was tested on the passive suspension set up, rather than the Porsche Active Suspension Management (PASM) that so many will surely be optioned with. You don't need it"

You can't have it any other way - PASM is not available on this car..
Apologies, my mistake in reading the press bumf. Good job it's so well sorted then! I'll amend the story now.


Matt

Maldini35

2,913 posts

188 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Fabulous looking car. Not sure you'd ever need more performance on the road.
£70k is a lot of money though.


tosh.brice

204 posts

211 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Is there a rear window in under that overhanging roof?

Edit: oh, yes a titchy one http://cdn1.autoexpress.co.uk/sites/autoexpressuk/...

Edited by tosh.brice on Tuesday 1st December 13:41

Ozzie Osmond

21,189 posts

246 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Maldini35 said:
£70k is a lot of money though.
Especially when you can be off down the road in a brand new Boxster S (with a 9 second, 30 mph roof) for less than £50k. Nonetheless, buyers will be forming an orderly queue to snap up the popular and profitable Spyders.

Andys1000

164 posts

126 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Looks and drives fabulously - Put my money down just in case they build the Boxter GT4 - go on Porsche you know you want to!!!!

Effjay

327 posts

173 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Can you still buy one of these? Or were they a limited run like the GT4?

RowntreesCabana

1,796 posts

254 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
I wouldn't touch another Porsche with a barge pole to be honest. The engine problems they've been having since the 996 are well documented across the majority of the range. I was tempted to go back recently and have a Cayman but after researching was surprised to see a continuation with engine failures which seem to be carried over from the 996 and Boxster. How do they get away with it?

tadaah

214 posts

211 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
RowntreesCabana said:
I wouldn't touch another Porsche with a barge pole to be honest. The engine problems they've been having since the 996 are well documented across the majority of the range. I was tempted to go back recently and have a Cayman but after researching was surprised to see a continuation with engine failures which seem to be carried over from the 996 and Boxster. How do they get away with it?
Probably because he incidence is nothing like as high as its made out to be?

tadaah

214 posts

211 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Would quite like one. I need to try to predict the sweet spot in secondhand prices...Buy at the bottom before they do a U turn like the 987!

RowntreesCabana

1,796 posts

254 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
tadaah said:
Probably because he incidence is nothing like as high as its made out to be?
but far, far higher than it really should be for a premium product. The treatment of some of the customers I've read about from Porsche has been absolutely horrendous too.

tadaah

214 posts

211 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
RowntreesCabana said:
but far, far higher than it really should be for a premium product. The treatment of some of the customers I've read about from Porsche has been absolutely horrendous too.
Ive not seen any actual figures though...so how do we know what the incidence really is? I've had three 987s two with 3.2 and one with a pre Gen II 3.4 Zero issues

cerb4.5lee

30,565 posts

180 months

Tuesday 1st December 2015
quotequote all
Maldini35 said:
Fabulous looking car.
It just shows how subjective looks are and its the way these look that puts me off them almost completely, from what I read all Boxster`s drive amazingly but for me I just cant forgive its ugly ducking looks and it certainly wont win a beauty contest anytime soon for me.