968 Sport vs 968 Club Sport
968 Sport vs 968 Club Sport
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Discussion

Corso Marche

Original Poster:

1,869 posts

226 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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I'm considering purchasing maybe a 968 as the next fun car for weekend use. I always thought I'd go 968CS, but now that I'm actually watching the classifieds I've noticed that there are far more 968 Sports coming up for sale, and obviously at more attractive prices than a Club Sport.

Question is though, is a ClubSport really worth the extra outlay over a Sport for some fun weekend driving on the public roads ? Is there actually that much of a discernible difference between the two with an average driver at the wheel up in the mountains on a Sunday afternoon ?

pikeyboy

2,349 posts

239 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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To be honest there is sod all difference between them and I have a CS, which I'll be selling soon.

ph123

1,841 posts

243 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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The very fact that there are fewer Clubsports and their pedigree puts them way ahead imho if you are interested in protecting your investment ... Clubsports an all-time great.

TGJR

750 posts

253 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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I would say from a driving & enjoyment point of view there is very little difference. It is easy to modify a 968 to be like the CS (apart from the CS's with the beefier suspension option).

It comes down to the effect of the 'desirability factor' on values. A CS costs more to buy but will always be sought after and probably appreciate in value over time.

v968sport

108 posts

201 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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A Sport is identical to a Club Sport under the skin. Only difference is the Sport has the comfort seats / electric windows, sunroof and mirrors / slightly larger wiring loom. The brakes and suspension are identical unless it had the MO30 option. A Sport is slightly heavier, thats about it.

nick_968

560 posts

263 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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There is actually very little difference between all 968's as the only guaranteed differences between coupes and Sport/ CS's are the springs are lowered by 1 inch and the weight. Lots of people go on about CS/ sport suspension but they have the same shocks as coupes, just lower springs, same brakes as coupes, only other difference is 50kg's lighter, some of which gets added back with a Sport model or options etc. Everything else was an option, i.e. you could have 17's on a Coupe, or a CS with a sunroof and a/c negating much of the weight savings. Its the collectability of the CS cars that sets them apart more than anything else, so you pay a bit more for them and get a bit more when you sell, so its all relative.

plenty

5,036 posts

211 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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Every Sport started life on the Zuffenhausen production line as a CS - Porsche UK added a few luxuries back in when they were shipped to this country. Many CSes come with these options specced anyway (it's almost impossible to find a non-sunroof CS for example) - which is why Porsche UK created the Sport variant.

While there is little to no qualitative difference between the cars, the iconic CS badge attracts buyers, and having observed the market for some time it's clear that a well-maintained CS will be easier to sell on than a Sport. As a Sport owner it pains me to perpetuate the myth, but if you have an eye on resale and are willing to commit the extra purchase cost up front, a CS makes sense not because it's a better car, but because it's a more desirable car.

anonymous-user

79 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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In addition to whats been said already unless you are bothered about residuals and rare factor etc the Sport is the better buy and better bang for buck

CaptainSlow

13,179 posts

237 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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Is a 968 still a viable daily drive?

DAB964RS

214 posts

192 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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CS is a 90s motoring icon as such it will always command a premium - it is also relatively rare in RHD, apparently only only 179 right hookers.

Buy a good CS and it's like having money in the bank, buy a good Sport it's like having an Icelandic bank account.

CS for me everytime

anonymous-user

79 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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DAB964RS said:
Buy a good CS and it's like having money in the bank
Best investment ive made in the past 12 months

Mag1calTrev0r

6,481 posts

254 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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So what's the difference between the seats in the CS (obviously better) and the Sport 'comfort' seats? How do the 'comfort' seats compare to the standard seats?

Would it be fair to say: Std. Seats < 'Comfort' seats < CS Seats?

will_968

2,138 posts

289 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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DAB964RS said:
...buy a good Sport it's like having an Icelandic bank account.
I disagree. I owned mine for 3 years and sold it for a grand less than I paid for it. Had I not wanted a very easy sale I'd have got all my money back (I was working abroad at the time and was selling back in the UK).

Corso Marche

Original Poster:

1,869 posts

226 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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Thanks for all the comments and replies folks. But I'm still undecided !! smile

968CS is worth it for the extra kudos when you attend a meet or show etc., but then the premium over a near-as-damnit Sport would put a lot of juice in the tank to provide some great driving enjoyment.... Smiles per mile 'n all that.... wink

Edited by Corso Marche on Wednesday 16th June 15:42

v968sport

108 posts

201 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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Mag1calTrev0r said:
So what's the difference between the seats in the CS (obviously better) and the Sport 'comfort' seats? How do the 'comfort' seats compare to the standard seats?

Would it be fair to say: Std. Seats < 'Comfort' seats < CS Seats?
Sport comfort seat are what they say they are, nice and comfortable for everyday driving but still hold you in place nicely. The Recaros in the Club Sport are hard bucket seats which probably wouldnt suit everyday driving.

Fabulous cars though.

ph123

1,841 posts

243 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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'Comfort' seats were the most uncomfortable crude things I've ever sat on ... and a complete contrast to the focussed CS seats.

anonymous-user

79 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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Expect to pay upwards of 14k for a half decent CS. Less than 10k might get you a 100k mile plus Sport that has been cherished and enthusiast owned. That gives you about 3k to play with assuming you lose about 1k on resale after 12 months. That 3g gets a lot of stuff

will_968

2,138 posts

289 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
quotequote all
Corso Marche said:
968CS is worth it for the extra kudos when you attend a meet or show etc., but then the premium over a near-as-damnit Sport would put a lot of juice in the tank to provide some great driving enjoyment.... Smiles per mile 'n all that.... wink
I don't think you get much in the way of kudos from those in the know. Those in the know know they're so close to being the same car that the premium paid for the CS is questionable at best on a day-to-day basis.

nick_968

560 posts

263 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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You might get some kudos if you turned up in a mint M030 spec CS with factory cage....but other than that you would have to have something pretty special as like Will says, those in the know....know better! Save the cash get a good clean Sport and put it towards a KW V3 kit and some maintenance....you won't look back.

NJH

3,021 posts

234 months

Wednesday 16th June 2010
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IMHO buy a sport and fit some proper Recaros, or do something different and buy an 85 pre-ABS 944 turbo.

All 968s are rare. ISTR on the UK market the sport was the biggest seller of the 968's, coupe sales dropped off once the cheaper CS or the latter sport was available.

In 20 months of ownership I am still yet to see another 968 on the road at the same time as mine and I use my car as a DD.

Be very wary of over hyped cars and prices, I can recall about 5 years ago seeing an absolutely mint sport for sale at £9.9K. Chatting to the garage owner recently he couldn't sell it and traded it in the end. Now fast forward a few years and there are few low mileage minty cars around but ppl are asking often crazy high prices, the spread can be all over the place. Don't fall into the trap of thinking you will definitely make mega bucks by speculating on a 968 CS that is likely already over priced.