Please help in selecting a used Cayenne...
#1
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Please help in selecting a used Cayenne...
Hi, thanks for looking!
I'm planning on buying a used Cayenne in a couple months. I'll be selling a well-used Mazda MPV and and even more well-used 928, and adding the Cayenne to the Mazda3 sedan and 944 turbo currently in the garage. I'm not rich and I'm happy and comfortable buying used cars (of the dozen or so cars I've owned, only the one - a Taurus SHO - was purchased new). I have a good and realiable Bosch mechanic who services my 944.
I've owned three all-wheel drive cars - a Talon TSi, a Subaru Forester and a Subaru Legacy wagon. I've also owned an SUV; an Isuzu Rodeo that was the single worst vehicle I've ever owned.
I won't be towing anything significant, nor will I normally be off-roading (I like all-wheel drive because I live in the Poconos). The car will spend the vast majority of its time on streets and highways (like most Cayennes, I suspect).
I need to be able to fit four people, a medium dog and/or luggage. I'll thow a Thule on top for extra storage for longer trips.
I don't need neck-snapping performance, but I want to be able to get up an on ramp, pass on a two-lane road and maybe take the occassional kid in a slammed Honda by surprise. I think I'd prefer a standard transmission, but I'm willing to consider an automatic if it doesn't suck too much.
I also want to lower the car from an SUV height to a sedan height. As I said: I don't intend on off-roading, so clearance isn't an issue. I don't want to have to jump up into my car, and I don't have a need to look down upon my fellow drivers. So, I need a Cayenne that will take a lowering kit.
Like this:
Not this:
I'm completely flexible on model year, motors, and trim levels. My other requirements are easy enough to find (A/C, heated seats, leather, etc.). My budget is sub $25k, preferrably in the neighborhood of $20k.
Any advice appreciated...
Thanks in advance.
I'm planning on buying a used Cayenne in a couple months. I'll be selling a well-used Mazda MPV and and even more well-used 928, and adding the Cayenne to the Mazda3 sedan and 944 turbo currently in the garage. I'm not rich and I'm happy and comfortable buying used cars (of the dozen or so cars I've owned, only the one - a Taurus SHO - was purchased new). I have a good and realiable Bosch mechanic who services my 944.
I've owned three all-wheel drive cars - a Talon TSi, a Subaru Forester and a Subaru Legacy wagon. I've also owned an SUV; an Isuzu Rodeo that was the single worst vehicle I've ever owned.
I won't be towing anything significant, nor will I normally be off-roading (I like all-wheel drive because I live in the Poconos). The car will spend the vast majority of its time on streets and highways (like most Cayennes, I suspect).
I need to be able to fit four people, a medium dog and/or luggage. I'll thow a Thule on top for extra storage for longer trips.
I don't need neck-snapping performance, but I want to be able to get up an on ramp, pass on a two-lane road and maybe take the occassional kid in a slammed Honda by surprise. I think I'd prefer a standard transmission, but I'm willing to consider an automatic if it doesn't suck too much.
I also want to lower the car from an SUV height to a sedan height. As I said: I don't intend on off-roading, so clearance isn't an issue. I don't want to have to jump up into my car, and I don't have a need to look down upon my fellow drivers. So, I need a Cayenne that will take a lowering kit.
Like this:
Not this:
I'm completely flexible on model year, motors, and trim levels. My other requirements are easy enough to find (A/C, heated seats, leather, etc.). My budget is sub $25k, preferrably in the neighborhood of $20k.
Any advice appreciated...
Thanks in advance.
#2
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Okay, after some poking (thank you slow work day), it looks like an '04 to '06 are in my budget (with diligent shopping), and that Eibach makes a kit that will drop the non-air suspension 1.4". The V6 has adequate power, but nothing earth-shattering and seems to be less trouble-prone than the V8. Also, the cardon shaft and coolant tubes are eventual guaranteed trouble areas.
Sound right?
Sound right?
#4
Rennlist Member
Those are the probably the right years for that price range. But the V-6 will probably never take a kid in a slammed Honda; instead, he may be able to reverse past you on the freeway.
I'm admittedly biased, but I would advise anyone to get the best V-8 they could. They are so cheap right now. And the Turbo for a few K more gives you the adjustable air suspension and the rice-rocket-swallowing zip you will learn to love. You're buying Porsche, not a VW! I know this will start a serious flaming rant, but I just don't understand why anyone buys the V6s. Ever.
Sounds like we are both Poor Man's Cayenne owners. I gave up a boxster to haul three kids and two dogs. But if I had to do it all again, I'd probably change two things: get a Turbo S instead of a Turbo; and buy the panorama roof and factory hitch already installed. Did the hitch factory hitch myself and it was a pain to wire; haven't figured out the pano roof part yet. ; )
If you read these threads at all, you will hear of recurring problems that are big and ugly (and expensive for people saving for kids' college). But look: a Cayenne is a lot like a wife (or GF) - an awesome creature with an attraction unlike any other. But once you move in together, you find there's some less pretty stuff that she never advertised. She can just shut down on the side of the road, and remind you there's nothing you can do about it. And you'll hate her for a few days as she unloads your wallet. But once she comes back all dressed up and cute again, purring like normal, you fall in love all over again, pledging your undying love to the end - which might be the next day.
The V6 is the nice, sweet, smart academic girl that your parents always wanted you to marry: wears birkenstocks on the weekends, gets her nails done once a year on her birthday;
The V8 is the wife most of us have: beautiful, fun, a little crazy, but mostly sensible. Gets tipsy on New Years, but not in front of the kids. Great gal, loves the usual girl things.
The Turbo is the wife we wish we had: bikini model, raging hot looks, saucy all the time, buys new lingerie to wear while she makes dinner. Requires steady feeding of jewelry, massages, high-end vacations, and BCBG. But you don't mind because she's not wearing any undies. Ever.
I've realized now that this group is therapy for me...
I'm admittedly biased, but I would advise anyone to get the best V-8 they could. They are so cheap right now. And the Turbo for a few K more gives you the adjustable air suspension and the rice-rocket-swallowing zip you will learn to love. You're buying Porsche, not a VW! I know this will start a serious flaming rant, but I just don't understand why anyone buys the V6s. Ever.
Sounds like we are both Poor Man's Cayenne owners. I gave up a boxster to haul three kids and two dogs. But if I had to do it all again, I'd probably change two things: get a Turbo S instead of a Turbo; and buy the panorama roof and factory hitch already installed. Did the hitch factory hitch myself and it was a pain to wire; haven't figured out the pano roof part yet. ; )
If you read these threads at all, you will hear of recurring problems that are big and ugly (and expensive for people saving for kids' college). But look: a Cayenne is a lot like a wife (or GF) - an awesome creature with an attraction unlike any other. But once you move in together, you find there's some less pretty stuff that she never advertised. She can just shut down on the side of the road, and remind you there's nothing you can do about it. And you'll hate her for a few days as she unloads your wallet. But once she comes back all dressed up and cute again, purring like normal, you fall in love all over again, pledging your undying love to the end - which might be the next day.
The V6 is the nice, sweet, smart academic girl that your parents always wanted you to marry: wears birkenstocks on the weekends, gets her nails done once a year on her birthday;
The V8 is the wife most of us have: beautiful, fun, a little crazy, but mostly sensible. Gets tipsy on New Years, but not in front of the kids. Great gal, loves the usual girl things.
The Turbo is the wife we wish we had: bikini model, raging hot looks, saucy all the time, buys new lingerie to wear while she makes dinner. Requires steady feeding of jewelry, massages, high-end vacations, and BCBG. But you don't mind because she's not wearing any undies. Ever.
I've realized now that this group is therapy for me...
#6
Burning Brakes
Those are the probably the right years for that price range. But the V-6 will probably never take a kid in a slammed Honda; instead, he may be able to reverse past you on the freeway.
I'm admittedly biased, but I would advise anyone to get the best V-8 they could. They are so cheap right now. And the Turbo for a few K more gives you the adjustable air suspension and the rice-rocket-swallowing zip you will learn to love. You're buying Porsche, not a VW! I know this will start a serious flaming rant, but I just don't understand why anyone buys the V6s. Ever.
Sounds like we are both Poor Man's Cayenne owners. I gave up a boxster to haul three kids and two dogs. But if I had to do it all again, I'd probably change two things: get a Turbo S instead of a Turbo; and buy the panorama roof and factory hitch already installed. Did the hitch factory hitch myself and it was a pain to wire; haven't figured out the pano roof part yet. ; )
If you read these threads at all, you will hear of recurring problems that are big and ugly (and expensive for people saving for kids' college). But look: a Cayenne is a lot like a wife (or GF) - an awesome creature with an attraction unlike any other. But once you move in together, you find there's some less pretty stuff that she never advertised. She can just shut down on the side of the road, and remind you there's nothing you can do about it. And you'll hate her for a few days as she unloads your wallet. But once she comes back all dressed up and cute again, purring like normal, you fall in love all over again, pledging your undying love to the end - which might be the next day.
The V6 is the nice, sweet, smart academic girl that your parents always wanted you to marry: wears birkenstocks on the weekends, gets her nails done once a year on her birthday;
The V8 is the wife most of us have: beautiful, fun, a little crazy, but mostly sensible. Gets tipsy on New Years, but not in front of the kids. Great gal, loves the usual girl things.
The Turbo is the wife we wish we had: bikini model, raging hot looks, saucy all the time, buys new lingerie to wear while she makes dinner. Requires steady feeding of jewelry, massages, high-end vacations, and BCBG. But you don't mind because she's not wearing any undies. Ever.
I've realized now that this group is therapy for me...
I'm admittedly biased, but I would advise anyone to get the best V-8 they could. They are so cheap right now. And the Turbo for a few K more gives you the adjustable air suspension and the rice-rocket-swallowing zip you will learn to love. You're buying Porsche, not a VW! I know this will start a serious flaming rant, but I just don't understand why anyone buys the V6s. Ever.
Sounds like we are both Poor Man's Cayenne owners. I gave up a boxster to haul three kids and two dogs. But if I had to do it all again, I'd probably change two things: get a Turbo S instead of a Turbo; and buy the panorama roof and factory hitch already installed. Did the hitch factory hitch myself and it was a pain to wire; haven't figured out the pano roof part yet. ; )
If you read these threads at all, you will hear of recurring problems that are big and ugly (and expensive for people saving for kids' college). But look: a Cayenne is a lot like a wife (or GF) - an awesome creature with an attraction unlike any other. But once you move in together, you find there's some less pretty stuff that she never advertised. She can just shut down on the side of the road, and remind you there's nothing you can do about it. And you'll hate her for a few days as she unloads your wallet. But once she comes back all dressed up and cute again, purring like normal, you fall in love all over again, pledging your undying love to the end - which might be the next day.
The V6 is the nice, sweet, smart academic girl that your parents always wanted you to marry: wears birkenstocks on the weekends, gets her nails done once a year on her birthday;
The V8 is the wife most of us have: beautiful, fun, a little crazy, but mostly sensible. Gets tipsy on New Years, but not in front of the kids. Great gal, loves the usual girl things.
The Turbo is the wife we wish we had: bikini model, raging hot looks, saucy all the time, buys new lingerie to wear while she makes dinner. Requires steady feeding of jewelry, massages, high-end vacations, and BCBG. But you don't mind because she's not wearing any undies. Ever.
I've realized now that this group is therapy for me...
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#8
Rocky Mountain High
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In the earlier Cayennes, I don't think you'll be able to find a manual transmission. There may be a very rare V6 out there with a manual, but I don't think many made it to the US, and I don't think it was even offered in the S or the turbo.
I would get a V8 if I were you, but I can tell you on thing, you will pay at the gas pump. Cayennes don't get great mileage. Ours tends to get around 13 - 14 mpg in town, and 20 - 21 mpg on the highway if we aren't too lead-footed.
I would get a V8 if I were you, but I can tell you on thing, you will pay at the gas pump. Cayennes don't get great mileage. Ours tends to get around 13 - 14 mpg in town, and 20 - 21 mpg on the highway if we aren't too lead-footed.
#9
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I would strongly urge you to get a V8 and insure that it is CPO'd. You don't want to be driving the one "naked".
The consensus seems to be that the '06+ models have less issues (relatively speaking) than earlier models.
I've had an '06 for a little over a year now...no "major" issues at all, but even the small issues (head unit, coils, hard/no-start after fill up) would probably be close to $3,000 if I were paying out of pocket for the repairs
The consensus seems to be that the '06+ models have less issues (relatively speaking) than earlier models.
I've had an '06 for a little over a year now...no "major" issues at all, but even the small issues (head unit, coils, hard/no-start after fill up) would probably be close to $3,000 if I were paying out of pocket for the repairs
#11
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A. The Cayenne was always 65% / 85% VAG content and labor.
B. VAG now owns PAG, thanks to Dr W.'s ego driven folly, so you are still buying a VAG car.
#12
Instructor
I was looking for a used V6 manual trans last year... it seems like there's always one or two for sale at a time but they sell pretty quickly. in the end I decided to custom order a new one because the '09 manual trans v6 Cayennes that I was looking at were priced in the high 40s low 50s and I got a new one for not much more than that.
here's an 05 v6 with manual transmission thats welll within your budget:
http://bit.ly/gztz0h
here's an 05 v6 with manual transmission thats welll within your budget:
http://bit.ly/gztz0h
#15
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