New Cayman to me.
Discussion
Hi,
I am in the process of buying a 987 Cayman 3.4S 2007. I have had a couple of newer Porsche in the last few years but this is my first older Porsche. I have spend weeks looking for the right car. The one I have found has 29k miles and full Porsche history. Every job has been completed at a Porsche dealership. I am just wondering what everyones thoughts are on the IMS bearing. I need to check all the receipts closer but on first inspection I did not see anything. Should I have the job done?
I am in the process of buying a 987 Cayman 3.4S 2007. I have had a couple of newer Porsche in the last few years but this is my first older Porsche. I have spend weeks looking for the right car. The one I have found has 29k miles and full Porsche history. Every job has been completed at a Porsche dealership. I am just wondering what everyones thoughts are on the IMS bearing. I need to check all the receipts closer but on first inspection I did not see anything. Should I have the job done?
As already stated, you can't change the IMS bearing on this engine without splitting the crankcase.
Borescore is your enemy. There are a few steps you can take to reduce risk though:
1. Forget bi-annual servicing. Oil & Filter change every year at least.
2. Fit a lower temperature thermostat.
3. Warm it up properly before you thrash it
4. Don't under-rev it. No full throttle at 30 mph in 4th (or even 3rd for that matter), ever.
Borescore is your enemy. There are a few steps you can take to reduce risk though:
1. Forget bi-annual servicing. Oil & Filter change every year at least.
2. Fit a lower temperature thermostat.
3. Warm it up properly before you thrash it
4. Don't under-rev it. No full throttle at 30 mph in 4th (or even 3rd for that matter), ever.
Already been said, keep the revs up! I treat 2k rpm as the minimum at all times, so 3rd gear through 30 limits, not 4th. And especially avoid bootfuls of gas at low revs / high gear. Flooring the gas at 50mph in 5th / 6th is not a good style of driving for these engines, get it into lower gears before you work it.
Anecdotal evidence points to the Tiptronic being most prone to bore score as it likes to change up early, and then doesn’t want to change down when you give it some gas.
Anecdotal evidence points to the Tiptronic being most prone to bore score as it likes to change up early, and then doesn’t want to change down when you give it some gas.
Magnum 475 said:
Already been said, keep the revs up! I treat 2k rpm as the minimum at all times, so 3rd gear through 30 limits, not 4th. And especially avoid bootfuls of gas at low revs / high gear. Flooring the gas at 50mph in 5th / 6th is not a good style of driving for these engines, get it into lower gears before you work it.
Anecdotal evidence points to the Tiptronic being most prone to bore score as it likes to change up early, and then doesn’t want to change down when you give it some gas.
Not sure about the 987 - but the 981 with PDK is very apt to let the engine labour (albeit briefly) at as little 1200 rpm, probably the worst feature of PDK.Anecdotal evidence points to the Tiptronic being most prone to bore score as it likes to change up early, and then doesn’t want to change down when you give it some gas.
mikef said:
Mine is 2006 bought new, still love it. I would check for corrosion on brake pipes, even if it's been garaged, and do a test drive and check for the hatch bumping on rough bit of roads; both can be corrected, but at a cost
Hatch bumping is the only thing that niggles me in my Cayman, present since I bought it in 2012 and no Porsche centre has had an answer to the problem - any recommendation for a solution?SD and P said:
mikef said:
Mine is 2006 bought new, still love it. I would check for corrosion on brake pipes, even if it's been garaged, and do a test drive and check for the hatch bumping on rough bit of roads; both can be corrected, but at a cost
Hatch bumping is the only thing that niggles me in my Cayman, present since I bought it in 2012 and no Porsche centre has had an answer to the problem - any recommendation for a solution?SD and P said:
mikef said:
Mine is 2006 bought new, still love it. I would check for corrosion on brake pipes, even if it's been garaged, and do a test drive and check for the hatch bumping on rough bit of roads; both can be corrected, but at a cost
Hatch bumping is the only thing that niggles me in my Cayman, present since I bought it in 2012 and no Porsche centre has had an answer to the problem - any recommendation for a solution?Gassing Station | Boxster/Cayman | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff


