Rocky wrote:I really wish I liked the styling of the ND, it would make the next purchase such an easy one. Nothing to touch an MX5 for value.
To appeal to me it would need to look more like the old RX7/8 (FDs) but that's never going to happen as 'styling' has moved off in a different direction.
I am thinking 'Cayman' a couple of years further down the line but damn they hold their value. Ten-year-old cars (of which there are only a few) are still listed at around half their orig. RRP whilst 5 yo examples are close to original RRP. I have never seen this kind of value retention with any other Make.
The 987.2 Cayman you are referencing (2010>2012) and 997.2 Carrera's (2009>2011) are destined to hold their value better than basically any car of that era!
Firstly there are way fewer out there as they were the facelift model which typically sell less than the original releases and sales were further suppressed given they were released just after the GFC.
And secondly they are the best of both worlds, containing direct injection engines like the following 981/991 (no IMS issues and very reliable) in the older style body which has hydraulic steering rather than electric. Also if you like the auto models they had the PDK rather than tiptronic.
Newer cars I think are usually optimistic owners who don't want to admit they need to take the hit. I purchased my Boxster 4 years old for about 60% of it's original cost from a Porsche dealer while the prices on Car Sales were far higher (I gave up negotiating with the owners when they justify value because they have some stupid interior colour or obscure option).
hmd wrote:Dan wrote:Yes maintenance is more expensive though nowhere near what people make out.
This is somewhat true, however when something big goes wrong that's when the repair cost differential is huge.
I am speaking from experience, having own 7 porsches over a period of 20 years including a then 4 years old boxster.
Yeh I can't disagree, MX5's are especially cheap to maintain and they can definitely be expensive if things go south.