Deciding between regular and the S
#1
Deciding between regular and the S
This decision is driving me nuts. I haven't driven a S yet. I have just driven the regular turbo and I thought it was a fantastic dialy driver. How much better is the S? This turbo I drove didn't have the cermanics but had everything else. Will I really notice not having the decals and the 40 extra hp? Looks like the price difference on the market is like 10-15k with similar miles.
#2
Banned
Been beating to death. All the S people will tell you to spend the money. All the non S people will tell you to save the money and if you really need more power a tuner will put you past the S.
I think the main deciding factor, or at least for me, ceramics or not. That is your answer based on that.
I think the main deciding factor, or at least for me, ceramics or not. That is your answer based on that.
#4
This decision is driving me nuts. I haven't driven a S yet. I have just driven the regular turbo and I thought it was a fantastic dialy driver. How much better is the S? This turbo I drove didn't have the cermanics but had everything else. Will I really notice not having the decals and the 40 extra hp? Looks like the price difference on the market is like 10-15k with similar miles.
#6
Addict
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Gone. On the Open Road
Posts: 16,578
Received 1,692 Likes
on
1,100 Posts
#7
Burning Brakes
Went through the same exercise. Originally decided on a new Turbo with Sports Chrono and PDCC.
I specifically did not want the Ceramic Brakes due mainly to high replacement costs of $35 K and being too
sensitive and "grabby" on light application. Although most of my tracking is with my GT3, I planned to
occasionally track the Turbo as well and the First and Second generations of Ceramic brakes had a very short Track Lifetime with no substitutes being available. Both the TT and TTS have more than "adequate" power and a careful analysis of the Specs shows them to be even closer than the advertised "40 HP"
indicates. A year ago, I would have bought the TT new and been pleased by the modest depreciation
and outstanding performance. Having delayed until a few weeks ago, the small cost difference of $10-15K between a good used TT and TTS (vs $30K-$40K new) made it a far "Better Buy". Also, the new Gen 3 Ceramic Brakes seem to be holding up much better than the previous generations on the Track and the availability of options, "reconditioning" or substituting Iron Rotors with no Caliper changes made it a "No Brainer" for me. I would caution you to make your purchase through an authorized Porsche Dealer and a "CPO" TTS which would give you 2 years of additional Warranty and your guarantee of a car which has been thoroughly checked and tested and is as close to "Perfect" as possible since parts and repairs can be VERY costly. I bought a lightly used and lightly optioned CPO'd 2015 TTS last month for $167K which I am delighted with. Best of luck on your purchase.
I specifically did not want the Ceramic Brakes due mainly to high replacement costs of $35 K and being too
sensitive and "grabby" on light application. Although most of my tracking is with my GT3, I planned to
occasionally track the Turbo as well and the First and Second generations of Ceramic brakes had a very short Track Lifetime with no substitutes being available. Both the TT and TTS have more than "adequate" power and a careful analysis of the Specs shows them to be even closer than the advertised "40 HP"
indicates. A year ago, I would have bought the TT new and been pleased by the modest depreciation
and outstanding performance. Having delayed until a few weeks ago, the small cost difference of $10-15K between a good used TT and TTS (vs $30K-$40K new) made it a far "Better Buy". Also, the new Gen 3 Ceramic Brakes seem to be holding up much better than the previous generations on the Track and the availability of options, "reconditioning" or substituting Iron Rotors with no Caliper changes made it a "No Brainer" for me. I would caution you to make your purchase through an authorized Porsche Dealer and a "CPO" TTS which would give you 2 years of additional Warranty and your guarantee of a car which has been thoroughly checked and tested and is as close to "Perfect" as possible since parts and repairs can be VERY costly. I bought a lightly used and lightly optioned CPO'd 2015 TTS last month for $167K which I am delighted with. Best of luck on your purchase.
Trending Topics
#9
Went through the same exercise. Originally decided on a new Turbo with Sports Chrono and PDCC.
I specifically did not want the Ceramic Brakes due mainly to high replacement costs of $35 K and being too
sensitive and "grabby" on light application. Although most of my tracking is with my GT3, I planned to
occasionally track the Turbo as well and the First and Second generations of Ceramic brakes had a very short Track Lifetime with no substitutes being available. Both the TT and TTS have more than "adequate" power and a careful analysis of the Specs shows them to be even closer than the advertised "40 HP"
indicates. A year ago, I would have bought the TT new and been pleased by the modest depreciation
and outstanding performance. Having delayed until a few weeks ago, the small cost difference of $10-15K between a good used TT and TTS (vs $30K-$40K new) made it a far "Better Buy". Also, the new Gen 3 Ceramic Brakes seem to be holding up much better than the previous generations on the Track and the availability of options, "reconditioning" or substituting Iron Rotors with no Caliper changes made it a "No Brainer" for me. I would caution you to make your purchase through an authorized Porsche Dealer and a "CPO" TTS which would give you 2 years of additional Warranty and your guarantee of a car which has been thoroughly checked and tested and is as close to "Perfect" as possible since parts and repairs can be VERY costly. I bought a lightly used and lightly optioned CPO'd 2015 TTS last month for $167K which I am delighted with. Best of luck on your purchase.
I specifically did not want the Ceramic Brakes due mainly to high replacement costs of $35 K and being too
sensitive and "grabby" on light application. Although most of my tracking is with my GT3, I planned to
occasionally track the Turbo as well and the First and Second generations of Ceramic brakes had a very short Track Lifetime with no substitutes being available. Both the TT and TTS have more than "adequate" power and a careful analysis of the Specs shows them to be even closer than the advertised "40 HP"
indicates. A year ago, I would have bought the TT new and been pleased by the modest depreciation
and outstanding performance. Having delayed until a few weeks ago, the small cost difference of $10-15K between a good used TT and TTS (vs $30K-$40K new) made it a far "Better Buy". Also, the new Gen 3 Ceramic Brakes seem to be holding up much better than the previous generations on the Track and the availability of options, "reconditioning" or substituting Iron Rotors with no Caliper changes made it a "No Brainer" for me. I would caution you to make your purchase through an authorized Porsche Dealer and a "CPO" TTS which would give you 2 years of additional Warranty and your guarantee of a car which has been thoroughly checked and tested and is as close to "Perfect" as possible since parts and repairs can be VERY costly. I bought a lightly used and lightly optioned CPO'd 2015 TTS last month for $167K which I am delighted with. Best of luck on your purchase.
Who told you ceramics are 35k to replace? lol. You can get them aftermarket and real ceramics for 11k. Or from porsche for like 16k I think it was. Also the sensitive grabby part, you get use to within 30 minutes of driving car. If anything after selling my TTS, I think every car I'm in has broken brakes now.
#10
I would have gotten an S instead of non S, except for ONE reason, I knew I was going to track the car and did NOT want the carbon ceramic breaks, which I had just had on my GT3. If they gave an option for an S without the carbon breaks, I would have gone S for sure.
Having said that, I LOVED my ceramic breaks on my GT3 but with the heavier weight of the turbo, I knew the ware weight and cost would be higher. If budget didn't matter, I would go again with the carbon's regardless of tracking.
Having said that, I LOVED my ceramic breaks on my GT3 but with the heavier weight of the turbo, I knew the ware weight and cost would be higher. If budget didn't matter, I would go again with the carbon's regardless of tracking.
#11
Putting all justifications aside over what options may or may not be of individual value, and, any respective savings claimed by each individual, at only 10 to 15K extra for an S it's an absolute no brainer.
Last edited by speed21; 12-15-2015 at 07:45 PM.
#13
Racer
No, like most other trim options, that's an option! You can build online and you will see what's included and whats's optional, with maybe a few exceptions - like deviated stitching, which you can't see/ build online. "S" is a no-brainer...
#15
Three Wheelin'
What are the real differences between the TT and the TT-S anyway? Ceramic brakes, center lock wheels, LED lights and the same engine with software tuning to add 40hp? Seems like if you get a regular TT and add an aftermarket chip, you wind up with a car with more horsepower and that still has top-notch headlights and brakes as well as wheels that you can change over easily by yourself.