2003 Cayenne S - £4k bargain or Bork bus of pain?

2003 Cayenne S - £4k bargain or Bork bus of pain?

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BenjiA

Original Poster:

300 posts

211 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Saw this for sale, as as I need a Dog Wagon quite urgently and it looked in decent order I went for it...

109,000 miles, some service history up to about 30k miles ago (Porsche Main dealer) but everything works so far and apart from the wheels, doesn't look tattty at all.

I know the two main issues with this model are the Plastic coolant pipes in the V and potential Bore-scoring.

Sadly, it looks like the pipes have not been done, so I'll get that done in a month or so (if there's any recommendations as to who to use in SE London/Kent, please let me know)

Bore-scoring, well I'll just have to live with that one....

It's going in to my local for a check over on the ramps tomorrow, but in the meantime I've ordered rear discs and pads as those look corroded on the outer edge and some HT paint to touch up the front caliper bells in Silver as they look rusty.
|https://thumbsnap.com/K53cmxGD[/url]
The wheels need a refurb, but the tyres are "Landsails" which, I'm not going to keep for long! I'll get a second hand set of 18" alloys and some winters so the 20" ones can go off for a tidy up in late September.

Cd changer isn't recognised, but has power, so a few things to check there, but may just replace it with a Bluetooth Module.
Will do a small headlight polish and protect.

I think I'm going to remove the PORSCHE script down the side as I think it looks a bit naff....everyone agree?
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So far very happy, it's on the steel springs which don't really like the motorway ridges much, but aren't terrible, one less thing to go wrong in my mind. Overall a lovely place to sit, can go a bit and is really pretty quiet at 90mph.

Will keep updating as I know this might be some people's idea of madness....I hated these when they came out, but compared to what came after to my mind it's almost svelte from some angles....

bolidemichael

13,907 posts

202 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Checking in from the barge thread. I'm fascinated to see what comes of your experience.

Cascade360

11,574 posts

86 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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An old Porsche SUV on landsails, hinting at the previous owners approach to maintenance. What can possibly go wrong...

Still, a lot of car for 4k.

mosermet

7 posts

64 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Have been thinking of a Cayenne, amongst others, as a cheap tow car come load-lugger so will be bookmarking this. Keep the updates coming.

louiebaby

10,651 posts

192 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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There's a few of these popping up in my Barge searches, but I'd be scared. Thank you for your service to my curiosity.

thumbup

Tom4398cc

259 posts

35 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Impressive dog wagon BenjiA

If it helps encourage you that it might not consume garage bills quicker than unleaded, my best mate, a naturally thrifty farmer, bought a similar 2003 Cayenne for £4,400. He ran it for a year and 5,000 miles before selling it for £4,300 to get back into a hot hatch. In the year he had it, he changed the oil, refurbished the wheels and polished the headlamp covers.........and that was it. Which he was very pleased about. Meanwhile, my similar age 4.4 litre V8 Range Rover cost me a fair few thousand in repairs and maintenance over the same year. Which made my mate even happier!

But if his experience was anything to go by, there is good reason for optimism with the original petrol Cayennes. Very best of luck with it.

Finally, what does the dog think of it?

BenjiA

Original Poster:

300 posts

211 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Dog's not been in it yet, but I am sure she'll be happier in it than she was in the Kid's citroen C1 we've been using since I sold the ML430.

TyrannosauRoss Lex

35,113 posts

213 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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I'll be following this with interest hehe

ATM

18,300 posts

220 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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BenjiA said:
So far very happy, it's on the steel springs which don't really like the motorway ridges much, but aren't terrible, one less thing to go wrong in my mind.
I'd suspect the cheap tyres have more to do with the ride than the steel springs. My mate had one of these and swapped out the 20 inch wheels when his wife obliterated one. Drove so much better on 18. Interesting fact my mate told me the genuine 20 inch wheels have different offsets front and rear so you can't swap them around.

BigBen

11,650 posts

231 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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TyrannosauRoss Lex said:
I'll be following this with interest hehe
ditto

BenjiA

Original Poster:

300 posts

211 months

Monday 26th July 2021
quotequote all
ATM said:
I'd suspect the cheap tyres have more to do with the ride than the steel springs. My mate had one of these and swapped out the 20 inch wheels when his wife obliterated one. Drove so much better on 18. Interesting fact my mate told me the genuine 20 inch wheels have different offsets front and rear so you can't swap them around.
Interestingly the 20" wheels seem to be quite rare, I found one set for £850 on ebay whereas I can get the 18's for £150. Might be a good way to cover my costs if the 18"s do indeed ride significantly better once I have changed the tyres.

ATM

18,300 posts

220 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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BenjiA said:
ATM said:
I'd suspect the cheap tyres have more to do with the ride than the steel springs. My mate had one of these and swapped out the 20 inch wheels when his wife obliterated one. Drove so much better on 18. Interesting fact my mate told me the genuine 20 inch wheels have different offsets front and rear so you can't swap them around.
Interestingly the 20" wheels seem to be quite rare, I found one set for £850 on ebay whereas I can get the 18's for £150. Might be a good way to cover my costs if the 18"s do indeed ride significantly better once I have changed the tyres.
I doubt they'll sell for 850. But if you shop around you'll probably find some 18 with decent tyres already on. That's what my mate did. So if you spend say 3 to 400 for wheels with tyres on then you're doing well. A change of 2 inch will transform the ride. And you'll be able to ignore kerbs too.

Court_S

13,005 posts

178 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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A braver man than I, but that does look like a hell of a lot of car for £4K.

Car_driver

111 posts

60 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Looks nice.
I've been running a Turbo of a similar vintage, but on 164k miles, for almost a year now.
If you have time on your hands, the coolant pipes are not a difficult DIY.
One thing that you 100% must do immediately though is lift your driver's & passenger side front carpets and make sure they are not wet ( a lot of wiring lives there). Even if all is dry, please make sure all your drains are unclogged (have a Google of "cayenne blocked drains").
I've had to do some DIY maintenance on mine and was surprised that some cayenne specific parts (such as plastic breather hoses) were cheaper to buy from the dealer than aftermarket suppliers.
Nice cars, but eye watering fuel consumption.

Andy665

3,634 posts

229 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Will be following this, its on our list of early 2022 purchases, looking to spend around £10-12k but also considering MLs and X5s of similar price too

sbk1972

855 posts

77 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Loving the thread. Great choice. :-) I looked at these before I went down the Ml55 AMG route.

Lots of scare stories on all these types of cars but lots of information / advice / guides to fit these issues. coolant pipe isnt that difficult, just take your time, take pics and you will be okay.

My Ml55 always needs something to be broken. When I fix everything then something will stop working. If I leave this issue then nothing else seems to break. So, fix everything but one issue and you will be okay :-)

biggbn

23,468 posts

221 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Kudos brother man, will follow this with interest!!

Deesee

8,462 posts

84 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Brilliant!!!

Coog

39 posts

90 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Have owned a 957 now for going on 3 years. I’ve maintained it myself and it’s largely been trouble free, unlike friends with X5’s and RangeRovers. Perhaps £800 in repairs and maintenance over 3 years and about 15k miles. Friend of mine has had similar positive experience with his 955 turbo albeit over 7 or 8 years now.

Yours must be one of the only ones around with plastic coolant pipes still fitted. They rarely last this long so be 100% sure they’re plastic before pulling the inlet off.

Drain plug clearing as above is good advice.

BenjiA

Original Poster:

300 posts

211 months

Monday 26th July 2021
quotequote all
Coog said:
Have owned a 957 now for going on 3 years. I’ve maintained it myself and it’s largely been trouble free, unlike friends with X5’s and RangeRovers. Perhaps £800 in repairs and maintenance over 3 years and about 15k miles. Friend of mine has had similar positive experience with his 955 turbo albeit over 7 or 8 years now.

Yours must be one of the only ones around with plastic coolant pipes still fitted. They rarely last this long so be 100% sure they’re plastic before pulling the inlet off.

Drain plug clearing as above is good advice.
I waved my mobile down the back of the engine - there's a thread on renntech that shows what it should look like if it's done, and it just looks like a load of plastic.

Given the week's biblical rains, the carpets are mercifully quite dry, perhaps a bit damp on the passenger side, I'll record the process of clearing the drains on here during the week for anyone following in my footsteps.

Dropping off to go on the ramp first thing tomorrow, so whilst the big worry of these things is the big Jobs, the small ones can add up....

BTW, Insurance was remarkably cheap, for SE7 London anyway, £320 a year with 10 years NC at 46 years old, £300 less than a 2007 ML63 FWIW.....
(expensive postcode even for London)