968 - the best spec...

968 - the best spec...

Author
Discussion

lord trumpton

Original Poster:

7,406 posts

126 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
...and what to avoid.

I'm strangely attracted to a 968 having recently driven one. Aside from the mechanics and basic checks, I'm interested to know what the 'ideal' model would be (aside from a clubs port) as I'm keen to buy one that will be easier to sell when I get bored of it.

For example, is a Manual more desirable over the steptronic?

I'm not a cabriolet fan, however are these a good buy and desirable or best avoided?

Colours - whats a desirable colour and what colours are best avoided

Sunroof - is this a desirable option or was it standard spec?

I realise everyone will have their own preferences, but I'm sure there must be a general package that would be easier to sell/more desirable.

Thanks for any input - LT

JagerT

455 posts

107 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
Buy a good Sport,Club Sports are overpriced for what is essentially the same vehicle built on the same production line with a specific spec only for the UK,as I understand it Porsche only built Club Sports it was Porsche UK that asked for them to be badged as Sports.

NJH

3,021 posts

209 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
Honest to god answer. Buy an ex-race car which hasn't been crashed and could still be converted to road running MoT friendly spec or already has an MoT.

drmark

4,848 posts

186 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
NJH said:
Honest to god answer. Buy an ex-race car which hasn't been crashed and could still be converted to road running MoT friendly spec or already has an MoT.
I would have to advise against that - having had a race 968 CS. So much is taken out it would cost a fortune to make a liveable road car. Great track toy, but if it is mainly for the road buy a road one. And do go CS - spec doesn't account for extra you will pay, but value will.

lord trumpton

Original Poster:

7,406 posts

126 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
So if a sport is the one to go for can you advise on transmission and good resale colours?


mollytherocker

14,366 posts

209 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
948 Sport manual. Its a CS with a few useful bits added. Its half the price of a CS.

You dont need a CS.

Richair

1,021 posts

197 months

Friday 11th December 2015
quotequote all
Not that I've driven an auto, but it's well regarded to be pretty awefull. Plus it's a sports car so it should have a manual. But admittedly I hate all true auto's with a passion. Sports were manual only though I think.

Buy on condition, not colour. There's never many available for sale so it pays not to be too fussy when it comes to colour. Spec wise there's not a huge amount of difference between a lot of them, but a sport is the one to have for sensible money.

Fat Albert

1,392 posts

181 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
echo the view on a Sport, mine had the Factory M030 Suspension, Brakes and LSD upgrades which made it a much more focussed drive than my previous 944T but also made things like Pad & Disk changes much more expensive!
If i was to have another one I would love a Riviera Blue, but I did like my Red one


drmark

4,848 posts

186 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
mollytherocker said:
948 Sport manual. Its a CS with a few useful bits added. Its half the price of a CS.

You dont need a CS.
But OP asked for best spec and that is CS. If he can afford it that is what he should get.
Sport basically same car but market sees them as less desirable - cheaper, but not necessarily better value in the longer term.

Edited to add: I raced a CS which was a waste of a good car. Could have done the work to any cooking 968



Edited by drmark on Saturday 12th December 09:55

NJH

3,021 posts

209 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
drmark said:
NJH said:
Honest to god answer. Buy an ex-race car which hasn't been crashed and could still be converted to road running MoT friendly spec or already has an MoT.
I would have to advise against that - having had a race 968 CS. So much is taken out it would cost a fortune to make a liveable road car. Great track toy, but if it is mainly for the road buy a road one. And do go CS - spec doesn't account for extra you will pay, but value will.
Personally I don't think any of that series of cars make great road cars any more, to heavy, to slow and boring engine for both the costs of finding a nice 944/968 these days or the running costs. Sorry if it offends anyone but its a series of cars that hasn't aged well hence the huge price disparity to the contemporary 911s. They will always however make for incredibly robust, well balanced track cars if one likes something to throw around on track.

Wozy68

5,391 posts

170 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
NJH said:
drmark said:
NJH said:
Honest to god answer. Buy an ex-race car which hasn't been crashed and could still be converted to road running MoT friendly spec or already has an MoT.
I would have to advise against that - having had a race 968 CS. So much is taken out it would cost a fortune to make a liveable road car. Great track toy, but if it is mainly for the road buy a road one. And do go CS - spec doesn't account for extra you will pay, but value will.
Personally I don't think any of that series of cars make great road cars any more, to heavy, to slow and boring engine for both the costs of finding a nice 944/968 these days or the running costs. Sorry if it offends anyone but its a series of cars that hasn't aged well hence the huge price disparity to the contemporary 911s. They will always however make for incredibly robust, well balanced track cars if one likes something to throw around on track.
I also owned a CS and thought it a fabulous extremely well balanced car and I loved it. However I have to agree with above and say it was underpowered and the engine considering the CCs was a bit boring. In the end I installed a CAT back Janspeed from Hartech and it transformed the car, probs didn't add any power but it was lighter and the noise was fab. Great upgrade to any 968. IMO

drmark

4,848 posts

186 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
Wozy68 said:
I also owned a CS and thought it a fabulous extremely well balanced car and I loved it. However I have to agree with above and say it was underpowered and the engine considering the CCs was a bit boring. In the end I installed a CAT back Janspeed from Hartech and it transformed the car, probs didn't add any power but it was lighter and the noise was fab. Great upgrade to any 968. IMO
+1 Had one on mine too.

EGTE

996 posts

182 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
NJH said:
Personally I don't think any of that series of cars make great road cars any more, to heavy, to slow and boring engine for both the costs of finding a nice 944/968 these days or the running costs. Sorry if it offends anyone but its a series of cars that hasn't aged well hence the huge price disparity to the contemporary 911s. They will always however make for incredibly robust, well balanced track cars if one likes something to throw around on track.
Must admit, I don't regret selling my 944 Turbo for a 996 for one second; for all the reasons above.

blade7

11,311 posts

216 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
EGTE said:
Must admit, I don't regret selling my 944 Turbo for a 996 for one second; for all the reasons above.
All of the reasons above don't apply when a good 944 turbo has the easily attainable 300+ bhp and is on modern suspension like KW coilovers.

Richair

1,021 posts

197 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
blade7 said:
All of the reasons above don't apply when a good 944 turbo has the easily attainable 300+ bhp and is on modern suspension like KW coilovers.
Seconded. I've said before on here and I stand by it: just over a year ago I was all set to sell my 951 to buy a 996 until I drove one, which for me was a big let down (it was a good one btw). But then I much prefer the mechanical feel of my 944, which is somewhat missing in a 996. But of course this is all incredibly subjective!

To say that the 944/968 hasn't aged well is just bks though...

Fat Albert

1,392 posts

181 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
drmark said:
Wozy68 said:
I also owned a CS and thought it a fabulous extremely well balanced car and I loved it. However I have to agree with above and say it was underpowered and the engine considering the CCs was a bit boring. In the end I installed a CAT back Janspeed from Hartech and it transformed the car, probs didn't add any power but it was lighter and the noise was fab. Great upgrade to any 968. IMO
+1 Had one on mine too.
+1 on mine too, loud enough to feel special, but not Barry-like

My mate sold his 968 for a 996 and regretted it, yes the 996 was super-fast but didn't feel special enough, so he chopped that in for a 993 (before they went silly prices) which was better but he then chopped that in for a TVR Chimera which was too special to use as an everyday car!!

I am thinking of going back to a frontrunner as a daily next year, the 944S2 looks good value against the 944T and 968s for similar real-world performance at the moment

mollytherocker

14,366 posts

209 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
drmark said:
But OP asked for best spec and that is CS. If he can afford it that is what he should get.
Sport basically same car but market sees them as less desirable - cheaper, but not necessarily better value in the longer term.

Edited to add: I raced a CS which was a waste of a good car. Could have done the work to any cooking 968



Edited by drmark on Saturday 12th December 09:55
He said to exclude a CS.

Helicopter123

8,831 posts

156 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
One day we will all look back and kick ourselves for not buying a CS.

EGTE

996 posts

182 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
blade7 said:
All of the reasons above don't apply when a good 944 turbo has the easily attainable 300+ bhp and is on modern suspension like KW coilovers.
No, they still do apply (for me). I rebuilt the M030 suspension and ran about 270BHP on my 951 and still vastly prefer my unmodified M030 996 with glorious-sounding sports-exhaust (and no rusting sills).

SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

234 months

Saturday 12th December 2015
quotequote all
I really wanted to love the 968 but personally found it a little dull. More exciting cars out there for similar money.