Driven: Porsche Cayman R
We know the Cayman R's good, but does it make sense?
A Porsche Cayman S with an extra 10bhp, a weight reduction of 55kg, lower and stiffer suspension with more negative camber, front and rear spoilers that reduce lift by 15% on the front and 40% on the rear, and a manual gearbox. All for a moderately reasonable £51,731 (£4124 more than a Cayman S). Ought to be a winner, right?
Well there's absolutely no doubt that the Cayman R is a pretty fabulous piece of kit, and the weight-saving tricks (RS door pull straps, no cup holders, no door pockets, a 10-litre smaller fuel tank) combined with the pleasantly lairy paint and graphics add a good dollop of hardcore appeal to the car. The question is whether it goes far enough
Yes, the ride is firmer, and the car feels marginally more eager, agile and keen to please out on the road. But it's no hardcore track weapon - it's still an eminently usable everyday car, despite the occasional difficulty you might have in dropping into the gorgeously grippy fixed-back bucket seats (they save a total of 12kg, don'tcha know...).
And yet, and yet, I reckon this very everyday approachability is (perversely) the Cayman R's downfall. Notwithstanding the fact that the 'R' badge has historically been reserved for truly hardcore Porsches, there is a nagging feeling that this isn't as extreme a car as you perhaps hope it might be.
In fact, if you did buy this car you would quite conceivably do so as an everyday purchase. And if you did that, you would most probably be tempted to tick the boxes marked 'air-con' and 'stereo'. Which would leave you with a car that's more Cayman S-plus than Cayman R.
And if there was no Cayman S, then the R's existence would make absolute sense. Indeed, it's still a brilliant car, both on track and off it (as our Adam Towler described when he drove the Cayman R in Abroadland back in February). But if you want to use a Cayman on the road, you'd probably be better off with an S, and if you want a £50k (ish) track toy with the Shield of Stuttgart on it, then why not point your hard-earned in the direction of, say, a 996 GT3 such as this one?

Had they called it the Cayman S Sport as they did with the runout model of the mk1, then it would be ok. Giving it the "R" moniker is creating expectations the car can't meet, no matter how brilliant the Cayman is. Boyster Spyder or - much, much better - a used 7.1 GT3 for me any day...
If that is the case then it is marketing Coup of the decade.
Funny how people get excited about a red nylon strap to open the door on a Porsche yet if it appeared on a Korean supermini it would be derided.
As well as being special a GT3 will probably hold its value better as well.
But then, I've never got the Cayman. I'm sure it is a great car to own but I've never got to grips with the idea that it is more expensive than the Boxster. Had it been cheaper (as the hard tops usually are) then I could have understood it. And the Boxster is such a fine-handling machine, does the benefit of the hard-top really outweigh the loss of pleasure of getting the top down?
Funny how people get excited about a red nylon strap to open the door on a Porsche yet if it appeared on a Korean supermini it would be derided.
marketing gone bananas.I drove the Cayman R a while ago, and concluded that for the real world a Cayman S with a LSD is a better option. The drive will be a lot better, and not as edgy. The R reminded me very much of the M3 CSL - expensive to start with (I saw a Cayman R specced at £71k at Porsche Mayfair) but will hold solid residuals once they are at circa £30k to £35k. Will it ever become a classic like the 996RS - no, for there will be Cayman RS one day and even that is unlikely to be a classic.
Is it a good car to drive to the 'Ring and back - yes.
Quite a few cars available.
I bet what you save on depreciation on this 2nd hand GT3 will neutralise the additional running cost over a Cayman R too (over say 3 years).
They missed a trick with this Cayman R, more power, but then it would be treading on the 911s toes. So marketing decided to do the engineering - red door straps, nominal power hike, crap looking stickers and a hefty price hike. Very poor effort IMO.
If that is the case then it is marketing Coup of the decade.
Funny how people get excited about a red nylon strap to open the door on a Porsche yet if it appeared on a Korean supermini it would be derided.

Had they called it the Cayman S Sport as they did with the runout model of the mk1, then it would be ok. Giving it the "R" moniker is creating expectations the car can't meet, no matter how brilliant the Cayman is. Boyster Spyder or - much, much better - a used 7.1 GT3 for me any day...
I see the comparison as odd, the 911RS is generally more track focused with the bonus of being able to drive it on the road. The Cayman R is more of a road car & good for the odd track day.
If that is the case then it is marketing Coup of the decade.
Funny how people get excited about a red nylon strap to open the door on a Porsche yet if it appeared on a Korean supermini it would be derided.
If that is the case then it is marketing Coup of the decade.
Funny how people get excited about a red nylon strap to open the door on a Porsche yet if it appeared on a Korean supermini it would be derided.

I had a Saab 9-3 Club Sport, lighter than average due to the aircon not being present, bog basic spec but rather than Club Sport, RS or Sport it was just "Poverty Spec".
Myself, I'd buy something like this http://pistonheads.com/sales/3119824.htm and spend 10 grand on suitable "improvements" and have 20 grand left over for insurance and running costs, I think it would probably be more fun than dumping 51K on a brand new one fresh out of the factory. :-)
Myself, I'd buy something like this http://pistonheads.com/sales/3119824.htm and spend 10 grand on suitable "improvements" and have 20 grand left over for insurance and running costs, I think it would probably be more fun than dumping 51K on a brand new one fresh out of the factory. :-)

I see the comparison as odd, the 911RS is generally more track focused with the bonus of being able to drive it on the road. The Cayman R is more of a road car & good for the odd track day.
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