My first taste of a spyder
#31
Three Wheelin'
I'm with the Spyder-folks on this. The Spyder is a very attractive car (in addition to its other virtues).
Coming from classic Italian cars, no 911 is particularly good looking (I can't count the GT1). The 911 historical claim to fame has been that they are Porsches and, as such, as reliable and functional a sports car as you could own.
I appreciate them for that, but have never understood the 911 cult, willing to accept the engine in the wrong place in order to get 2 terrible rear seats.
Coming from classic Italian cars, no 911 is particularly good looking (I can't count the GT1). The 911 historical claim to fame has been that they are Porsches and, as such, as reliable and functional a sports car as you could own.
I appreciate them for that, but have never understood the 911 cult, willing to accept the engine in the wrong place in order to get 2 terrible rear seats.
#32
Nordschleife Master
I'm with the Spyder-folks on this. The Spyder is a very attractive car (in addition to its other virtues).
Coming from classic Italian cars, no 911 is particularly good looking (I can't count the GT1). The 911 historical claim to fame has been that they are Porsches and, as such, as reliable and functional a sports car as you could own.
I appreciate them for that, but have never understood the 911 cult, willing to accept the engine in the wrong place in order to get 2 terrible rear seats.
Coming from classic Italian cars, no 911 is particularly good looking (I can't count the GT1). The 911 historical claim to fame has been that they are Porsches and, as such, as reliable and functional a sports car as you could own.
I appreciate them for that, but have never understood the 911 cult, willing to accept the engine in the wrong place in order to get 2 terrible rear seats.
1 - a shape and line purity that has passed the test of time
2 - an all-in-the-rear design which provides traction without par
3 - an all-in-the-rear design with outstanding transfer of mass for all out braking dynamics
4 - an all-in-the-rear design with entertaining driving dynamics that some of us love
Those who do not understand/subscribe to the above 4 points, go and be happy with something else.
Last edited by ADias; 10-22-2012 at 07:45 PM.
#33
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
The '86 coupe was a very tough one to lose. I really enjoyed the feel of that car. The car was pristine and original in every way shape and form with service records dating to the first oil change. But I could not jusify two 997s, a Cayenne and a 3.2. The 3.2 would have never been driven more than once a month. I do see a early SWB 911 91967 S is my favorite given the green gauges, hockey puck steering wheel and first year of the Fuchs) when I hit 50. The market is crazy for those cars now and there is no sign of softening .. I think.
Last edited by w00tPORSCHE; 10-22-2012 at 08:09 PM.
#34
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Saw two spyders en route today during
my two hour commute and now just opened the Oct issue of Panorama and guess what's on the cover
my two hour commute and now just opened the Oct issue of Panorama and guess what's on the cover
#35
Yes I did. Letting the track beast go was an easy decision as a lot has changed in my life and I don't see myself gracing any HPDE/DE/DS/racing school in the next couple of years. I did two events with that and it was a lot of fun. I can never see myself being hard core addicted to the track.
The '86 coupe was a very tough one to lose. I really enjoyed the feel of that car. The car was pristine and original in every way shape and form with service records dating to the first oil change. But I could not jusify two 997s, a Cayenne and a 3.2. The 3.2 would have never been driven more than once a month. I do see a early SWB 911 91967 S is my favorite given the green gauges, hockey puck steering wheel and first year of the Fuchs) when I hit 50. The market is crazy for those cars now and there is no sign of softening .. I think.
The '86 coupe was a very tough one to lose. I really enjoyed the feel of that car. The car was pristine and original in every way shape and form with service records dating to the first oil change. But I could not jusify two 997s, a Cayenne and a 3.2. The 3.2 would have never been driven more than once a month. I do see a early SWB 911 91967 S is my favorite given the green gauges, hockey puck steering wheel and first year of the Fuchs) when I hit 50. The market is crazy for those cars now and there is no sign of softening .. I think.
This is my track toy. Started as an '83 SC so much fun to drive and raw PORSCHE
#36
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Although I personally think nearly all generations of 911 (except some 996 variants) are beautiful I do admit that I prefer the look of the Spyder. When you factor in the driving dynamics it makes the decision even easier for me.
I can't say the same for all generations of Boxster, I personally think the Boxster started coming in to its own in 2008 when Hp, Beauty and driving dynamics came together in a great package. Before that it seems there was something always missing from the equation.
I can't say the same for all generations of Boxster, I personally think the Boxster started coming in to its own in 2008 when Hp, Beauty and driving dynamics came together in a great package. Before that it seems there was something always missing from the equation.
#37
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Link for the car that I test drove is up and runnng. I thought the silver door straps were a nice touch. Car also has silver seat belts. If anyone is interested I can put you through my salesman there.
http://barrier.porschedealer.com/pre...80759/info.php
f4 .. what a beauty your SC is. Very nice.
http://barrier.porschedealer.com/pre...80759/info.php
f4 .. what a beauty your SC is. Very nice.
#38
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
#39
Rennlist Member
When parked next to my Ruf RT12, my friends who know nothing about cars assume our Spyder is the faster and cooler car, lol.
Silver on red would have been my second choice. Wow, what a spec!!
Silver on red would have been my second choice. Wow, what a spec!!
#40
I'm with the Spyder-folks on this. The Spyder is a very attractive car (in addition to its other virtues).
Coming from classic Italian cars, no 911 is particularly good looking (I can't count the GT1). The 911 historical claim to fame has been that they are Porsches and, as such, as reliable and functional a sports car as you could own.
I appreciate them for that, but have never understood the 911 cult, willing to accept the engine in the wrong place in order to get 2 terrible rear seats.
Coming from classic Italian cars, no 911 is particularly good looking (I can't count the GT1). The 911 historical claim to fame has been that they are Porsches and, as such, as reliable and functional a sports car as you could own.
I appreciate them for that, but have never understood the 911 cult, willing to accept the engine in the wrong place in order to get 2 terrible rear seats.
#41
Nordschleife Master
Link for the car that I test drove is up and runnng. I thought the silver door straps were a nice touch. Car also has silver seat belts. If anyone is interested I can put you through my salesman there.
http://barrier.porschedealer.com/pre...80759/info.php
http://barrier.porschedealer.com/pre...80759/info.php
#42
Three Wheelin'
The one blanket statement that should never be made is that a particular car is not good looking, for looks are, as they should be, subjective. Furthermore, "coming from classic italian cars" does not make one an expert. For example, in Top Gear's Jeremy Clarkson's opinion, there has not been a truly good looking Ferrari between the 328 and the 458. That leaves out a whole bunch of Ferraris! Of course that is just his opinion. I think that most Ferraris, along with most Porsches, are attractive cars...but that is just my opinion.
I did not provide a blanket statement that the 911 (or any car) is not good looking. As you say, that can be very subjective.
I used "coming from classic Italian cars" to describe/define my perspective, not any level of expertise. With that clarified, you can read my first line as from my perspective, "no 911 is particularly good looking". That doesn't mean that 911s are ugly or even unattractive, just that the Spyder "as a very attractive car", wins my vote on looks.
BTW, when I say 'classic', I'm referring to cars that are at least 25 years old. In our case, those cars date from the 60s and 70s.
I wouldn't use Clarkson's opinion in support, given his negative view of Porsche design/styling.
I apologize to anyone/everyone who inferred more than I wrote and intended.
#43
And I thought I was being pretty careful on that post..
I did not provide a blanket statement that the 911 (or any car) is not good looking. As you say, that can be very subjective.
I used "coming from classic Italian cars" to describe/define my perspective, not any level of expertise. With that clarified, you can read my first line as from my perspective, "no 911 is particularly good looking". That doesn't mean that 911s are ugly or even unattractive, just that the Spyder "as a very attractive car", wins my vote on looks.
BTW, when I say 'classic', I'm referring to cars that are at least 25 years old. In our case, those cars date from the 60s and 70s.
I wouldn't use Clarkson's opinion in support, given his negative view of Porsche design/styling.
I apologize to anyone/everyone who inferred more than I wrote and intended.
I did not provide a blanket statement that the 911 (or any car) is not good looking. As you say, that can be very subjective.
I used "coming from classic Italian cars" to describe/define my perspective, not any level of expertise. With that clarified, you can read my first line as from my perspective, "no 911 is particularly good looking". That doesn't mean that 911s are ugly or even unattractive, just that the Spyder "as a very attractive car", wins my vote on looks.
BTW, when I say 'classic', I'm referring to cars that are at least 25 years old. In our case, those cars date from the 60s and 70s.
I wouldn't use Clarkson's opinion in support, given his negative view of Porsche design/styling.
I apologize to anyone/everyone who inferred more than I wrote and intended.
#44
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
I can't believe Clarkson doesn't think the 355 is a beautiful design. IMHO it is one of the most beautiful modern cars in existence.
#45
Three Wheelin'
For a car that met all the government standards of the day, they did a great job of capturing and updating the classic Ferrari look. It's the only 'new' Ferrari I've seriously considered owning. And the 355 was the last car Ferrari made before every car started to get really big.