£750* of Beige Porsche Cayenne

£750* of Beige Porsche Cayenne

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RustyNissanPrairie

97 posts

6 months

Tuesday 11th March
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eth2190 said:
RustyNissanPrairie said:
I beat you by £250! biggrin (but you have cruise and pano roof!)

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

Great cars - love mine but it's a bit thirsty for knocking about/commuting to work.
I did have a good read of your thread before making my mind up on getting one. It was useful perspective on the DIY upkeep side of things. thumbup


The job for this evening was setting up this Airvidox odour eliminator to get rid of any residual smells. It's pretty potent stuff.


Various parts should start to arrive in the next few days, so more to come.
The factory workshop manual is available online in PDF form - however it's 6000pages / 170mb as a lot of earlier sections are repeated as the job technicalities increase. Still worth downloading though.

The parts ID manual is also available in PDF but you are better off going on Eurospares.co.uk website where the same manual is categorised (and has prices).

OEM service parts are normal prices from Autodoc, 9Apart Porsche breakers were good for Porsche specific parts (and are local to me!)

Tinkering wise - mine has been fine, fasteners have come undone without issue. Make sure you change the diff and gearbox/transfer box oils if they haven't been done - the service schedule is 160k miles which is way to long.
I've used Mannol 3390 in the gearbox (and in my Volvo's for years), Ravenol in the transfer and standard GL5 in the diffs.

If you are thinking of off-roading it then Eurowise & Berg Performance in the US are leading in modifications. I have seen Estonian copies of Eurowise coil lift kits on eBay for sensible prices. Darkside do a few bits for the 955.

As you've read - in a year of ownership mine has done the NC500, towed a caravan, and been to Prague and back without issue - good motoring for £500. Hopefully yours is as good!



Edited by RustyNissanPrairie on Tuesday 11th March 15:20


Edited by RustyNissanPrairie on Tuesday 11th March 15:22

eth2190

Original Poster:

145 posts

12 months

Thursday 13th March
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RustyNissanPrairie said:
Thanks for the tips!

In preparation for servicing the Cayenne I picked up some beefier ramps on marketplace for £30. My old ones were only rated to 2 tonne and I never had much faith in them. These should be more than strong enough.


I took the car to a local mot place to get it on the lift for an inspection. I find it worthwhile as it's often hard to get a full picture while laying on your back.
Other than some corrosion on the rear subframe they couldn't find fault with it. Even the notorious prop shaft centre bearing was fine. It looks like it has been replaced not too long ago.
The car does exhibit a vibration that increases with speed, so it's not clear what's causing this. It could be that the prop is out of balance. I can live with it for now.




Some service bits arrived also. Keen to get started I went ahead and replaced the original coil packs as it's very easy on this engine. The plugs have plenty of life left in them.
One spark plug well had quite a bit of oil in it. It looks like the gasket might be pinched, so will tackle this at a later date.



I installed the shim to correct the driver's door sag. Before it would need to be slammed but now its latching nicely with a gentle push. The gaps look decent as well.




After speaking to a body shop its looking like fixing the dull paintwork on the driver's side would set me back about £1k. As an alternative I'm going to look for a replacement wing in the correct colour. The wing is the most obvious from how it contrasts with the rest of the front end. The doors might be somewhat passable with some polishing work, and I can still get it painted later down the line.

Next step will be fresh fluids.

SAS Tom

3,612 posts

185 months

Thursday 13th March
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I have a new love for Cayennes. My friend lent me his to do a trial in. In a field of Land Rovers, Jeeps and Jimny’s it did surprisingly well!


poppopbangbang

2,208 posts

152 months

Friday 14th March
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SAS Tom said:
I have a new love for Cayennes. My friend lent me his to do a trial in. In a field of Land Rovers, Jeeps and Jimny’s it did surprisingly well!

955/957 Cayennes are awesome! Very few realise how capable they are. Here's mine leading some Patrols and Landcruisers through a Morrocan river crossing:


Spinakerr

1,321 posts

156 months

Friday 14th March
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Congratulations, that is a very smart buy. Just goes to show, again, how many perfectly useable cars get written off and sink in value.

Thanks for posting up Airivox, keen to hear ypur experiebce as I need to extricate dog smells from my latest purchase!

eth2190

Original Poster:

145 posts

12 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
Spinakerr said:
Congratulations, that is a very smart buy. Just goes to show, again, how many perfectly useable cars get written off and sink in value.

Thanks for posting up Airivox, keen to hear ypur experiebce as I need to extricate dog smells from my latest purchase!
Thanks. The Airvidox has definitely done the trick in terms of removing the musty smell. I expect it'll smell faintly of chlorine for a few weeks though.

jamesson

3,286 posts

232 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
eth2190 said:
Spinakerr said:
Congratulations, that is a very smart buy. Just goes to show, again, how many perfectly useable cars get written off and sink in value.

Thanks for posting up Airivox, keen to hear ypur experiebce as I need to extricate dog smells from my latest purchase!
Thanks. The Airvidox has definitely done the trick in terms of removing the musty smell. I expect it'll smell faintly of chlorine for a few weeks though.
Another vote for AirVidox here. It got rid of a lingering cigar smell in a second hand car I bought. Great stuff.

eth2190

Original Poster:

145 posts

12 months

Saturday 15th March
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Completed the engine oil service today along with the serpentine belt.



The android head unit arrived so I was able to get that installed as well. Everything seems to integrate well with the steering wheel controls etc.
The touch screen is pretty iffy, hopefully I wont need to use it much beyond initial setup.


tr7v8

7,367 posts

239 months

Saturday 15th March
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Ex-V8S owner here, that's a pretty rare colour, mine was dark olive green & I only ever saw 1 other. Most are black, silver or grey.
The V8S and the V6 are pretty similar fuel consumption, its a big old lump to haul around with only 3.2 L & 250BHP.
Pano rooves are a pain. Mine didn't leak but died after a couple of years, Ray Northway told me that fixing them is a very expensive pain. DO NOT OIL IT! Apparently that kills them PDQ.
A lot of your options were standard on the V8S, cruise is good, as is multifunction steering wheels. I'd only had mine 3 weeks & the wife took it into East London. When she came back to it someone had tried to nick the NS mirror. A phone call to my local OPC & he asked me to sit down. Just the glass was £480!!! Hence a probable write off.
One essential bit that no one will tell you about, is remove the drain plugs that are behind the front wheel arch liners. These block & eventually flood the front of the car with foul smelling water. There is a ton of wiring under the carpets, the water corrodes through then gives lots of electrical issues. Unless you can fix it yourself (difficult) then this will instantly write it off.
Worth getting an iCarSoft 960 as you'll have error codes at some point.
Electrical faults killed mine with weird fuel pump issues. £1K worth of bits didn't fix it & I gave up in the end & chopped it.
19" wheels ruin the ride, mine had 19" with Vredestein Vortis for summer & 18" with Dunlop winters. It rode much better on the winters & my god are the 19" wheels heavy to change twice a year.
When you change the tyres get the geomettry checked, mine was much nicer to drive after a full Hunter alignment.