Shopping for a Macan. Essential options?
#16
Three Wheelin'
What I personally don't like about the sunroof is the heat intrusion. The shade helps, but it's a big window that lets heat in. Not that I probably would notice the difference, but it also puts more weight high in the vehicle raising the center of gravity. The impact of that is more in my head than anything else. It's also a cost for something that I need to keep reminding myself to try to use. I've had the car about 3 weeks and love the car, but would have loved it just as much without the sunroof. The spec I would have ordered would not have had the sunroof.
#17
Rennlist Member
What I personally don't like about the sunroof is the heat intrusion. The shade helps, but it's a big window that lets heat in. Not that I probably would notice the difference, but it also puts more weight high in the vehicle raising the center of gravity. The impact of that is more in my head than anything else. It's also a cost for something that I need to keep reminding myself to try to use. I've had the car about 3 weeks and love the car, but would have loved it just as much without the sunroof. The spec I would have ordered would not have had the sunroof.
#18
Drifting
The Cayenne is great if you need the additional space. My biggest issue with the Cayenne is the transmission. The PDK in the Macan is far superior to the tiptronic in the Cayenne. My biggest complaint with the Cayenne (which I think is a excellent vehicle by the way) is the transmission. The Macan completely remedies that. My dad had never driven a Macan and after spending 5 minutes behind the wheel he goes 'I wish the cayenne felt like this. The PDK makes a world of difference'.
With that said, size is the next biggest factor. If you need the space, the Cayenne is the pick. The Macan is fairly small. It's basically a taller sedan. The trunk is actually less wide in the Macan than my wife's previous VW GLI.
With that said, size is the next biggest factor. If you need the space, the Cayenne is the pick. The Macan is fairly small. It's basically a taller sedan. The trunk is actually less wide in the Macan than my wife's previous VW GLI.
#19
Drifting
My new Sti, does not have a sunroof. What I like? Lots of headroom. At least 3 inches.
My BMW pano roof, has a hard cover. Keep the sun out, keep the heat out, keeps the cold -4o out too.
My Macan - too hot, too cold, says Mrs Smoke (aka goldie locks)
I even went so far as to ceramic tint the inside of my sunroof. It helps with the heat, but not the cold.
My BMW pano roof, has a hard cover. Keep the sun out, keep the heat out, keeps the cold -4o out too.
My Macan - too hot, too cold, says Mrs Smoke (aka goldie locks)
I even went so far as to ceramic tint the inside of my sunroof. It helps with the heat, but not the cold.
#20
My new Sti, does not have a sunroof. What I like? Lots of headroom. At least 3 inches.
My BMW pano roof, has a hard cover. Keep the sun out, keep the heat out, keeps the cold -4o out too.
My Macan - too hot, too cold, says Mrs Smoke (aka goldie locks)
I even went so far as to ceramic tint the inside of my sunroof. It helps with the heat, but not the cold.
My BMW pano roof, has a hard cover. Keep the sun out, keep the heat out, keeps the cold -4o out too.
My Macan - too hot, too cold, says Mrs Smoke (aka goldie locks)
I even went so far as to ceramic tint the inside of my sunroof. It helps with the heat, but not the cold.
#22
Rennlist Member
As a former Cayenne Turbo owner (x2) and now a Macan GTS owner, I can agree with all of this. During an extended service for my 2nd CTT, I had a Macan S and then a GTS as service loaners (we're talking a month each). That sold me on the Macan. I preferred the overall driving dynamics to the Cayenne. I still needed some utility, but no longer needed the size of the Cayenne.
#23
What I personally don't like about the sunroof is the heat intrusion. The shade helps, but it's a big window that lets heat in. Not that I probably would notice the difference, but it also puts more weight high in the vehicle raising the center of gravity. The impact of that is more in my head than anything else. It's also a cost for something that I need to keep reminding myself to try to use. I've had the car about 3 weeks and love the car, but would have loved it just as much without the sunroof. The spec I would have ordered would not have had the sunroof.
#24
We live in Alabama. It's hot. We specced our '19 S without the sunroof and went with the Thermally and Noise Insulated Glass to try to cut down on heat intrusion as much as possible. Every Macan I test drove had the sunroof. My gripes were that it simply took too long to open and close and the heat intrusion and rollover concerns. I've also read that there are no established safety standards for sunroof glass unlike that for the windshield. My `14 911 has the sunroof with the mesh screen and I enjoy it. It's much smaller and I only notice a negligible amount of heat from it. I bought the car used so settle for it. I love it on the sport cars, but not a big fan no the big vehicles. My $0.02.
#25
Three Wheelin'
Originally Posted by KM1959
I hear you on the heat but the benefits on warm evenings makes it kind of nice. It was already on my car but, like you, if I was specifying I might not get it.
#26
Drifting
I do have one of those laser heat guns, but I don't have a before measurement.
Maybe, I'll go see my neighbour? She has the same car. She already thinks I'm odd.
#27
My new Sti, does not have a sunroof. What I like? Lots of headroom. At least 3 inches.
My BMW pano roof, has a hard cover. Keep the sun out, keep the heat out, keeps the cold -4o out too.
My Macan - too hot, too cold, says Mrs Smoke (aka goldie locks)
I even went so far as to ceramic tint the inside of my sunroof. It helps with the heat, but not the cold.
My BMW pano roof, has a hard cover. Keep the sun out, keep the heat out, keeps the cold -4o out too.
My Macan - too hot, too cold, says Mrs Smoke (aka goldie locks)
I even went so far as to ceramic tint the inside of my sunroof. It helps with the heat, but not the cold.
#28
Instructor
I try to keep mine cars nicely optioned without going overboard. If I really wanted diamond-stitch leather seats, B&O stereo, virtual cockpit, etc. I'd get an Audi SQ5 to $65K with *everything*.
My Macan would be as follows:
Base Macan
Sapphire Blue
Premium Package Plus (Bose, Panoramic Sunroof, etc.)
18-way seats
Navigation
Black window trim
Lane-change assist
And that comes to ~$63K. Maybe I'd add the "sports exhaust" just for the quad tips, but is it really that important? I'd have a hard time spending too much more on a depreciating asset. I also have a hard time swallowing the abysmal gas mileage of anything other than Base model.
For context, I currently drive a 2014 BMW X1 with the "N55" twin-scroll turbo, inline six cylinder good for 300 hp and 300lb-ft of torque in a package that weighs <4,000lbs. It's great, but I can think of one (1) time I've actually been able to tap into that kind of power and it was on a Seattle-Utah road trip. Otherwise, the four cylinder more than meets my needs. I don't track my cars and I live in a congested, urban area. I have all of the options that came on a 2014 X1: Panoramic sunroof, Nav, backup camera, parking sensors, H/K stereo, leather, sports seats, etc. It's great, but I've never felt that I'm missing a hydraulic suspension or "torque vectoring".
-James
Seattle, WA
My Macan would be as follows:
Base Macan
Sapphire Blue
Premium Package Plus (Bose, Panoramic Sunroof, etc.)
18-way seats
Navigation
Black window trim
Lane-change assist
And that comes to ~$63K. Maybe I'd add the "sports exhaust" just for the quad tips, but is it really that important? I'd have a hard time spending too much more on a depreciating asset. I also have a hard time swallowing the abysmal gas mileage of anything other than Base model.
For context, I currently drive a 2014 BMW X1 with the "N55" twin-scroll turbo, inline six cylinder good for 300 hp and 300lb-ft of torque in a package that weighs <4,000lbs. It's great, but I can think of one (1) time I've actually been able to tap into that kind of power and it was on a Seattle-Utah road trip. Otherwise, the four cylinder more than meets my needs. I don't track my cars and I live in a congested, urban area. I have all of the options that came on a 2014 X1: Panoramic sunroof, Nav, backup camera, parking sensors, H/K stereo, leather, sports seats, etc. It's great, but I've never felt that I'm missing a hydraulic suspension or "torque vectoring".
-James
Seattle, WA
#29
Pro
I try to keep mine cars nicely optioned without going overboard. If I really wanted diamond-stitch leather seats, B&O stereo, virtual cockpit, etc. I'd get an Audi SQ5 to $65K with *everything*.
My Macan would be as follows:
Base Macan
Sapphire Blue
Premium Package Plus (Bose, Panoramic Sunroof, etc.)
18-way seats
Navigation
Black window trim
Lane-change assist
And that comes to ~$63K. Maybe I'd add the "sports exhaust" just for the quad tips, but is it really that important? I'd have a hard time spending too much more on a depreciating asset. I also have a hard time swallowing the abysmal gas mileage of anything other than Base model.
For context, I currently drive a 2014 BMW X1 with the "N55" twin-scroll turbo, inline six cylinder good for 300 hp and 300lb-ft of torque in a package that weighs <4,000lbs. It's great, but I can think of one (1) time I've actually been able to tap into that kind of power and it was on a Seattle-Utah road trip. Otherwise, the four cylinder more than meets my needs. I don't track my cars and I live in a congested, urban area. I have all of the options that came on a 2014 X1: Panoramic sunroof, Nav, backup camera, parking sensors, H/K stereo, leather, sports seats, etc. It's great, but I've never felt that I'm missing a hydraulic suspension or "torque vectoring".
-James
Seattle, WA
My Macan would be as follows:
Base Macan
Sapphire Blue
Premium Package Plus (Bose, Panoramic Sunroof, etc.)
18-way seats
Navigation
Black window trim
Lane-change assist
And that comes to ~$63K. Maybe I'd add the "sports exhaust" just for the quad tips, but is it really that important? I'd have a hard time spending too much more on a depreciating asset. I also have a hard time swallowing the abysmal gas mileage of anything other than Base model.
For context, I currently drive a 2014 BMW X1 with the "N55" twin-scroll turbo, inline six cylinder good for 300 hp and 300lb-ft of torque in a package that weighs <4,000lbs. It's great, but I can think of one (1) time I've actually been able to tap into that kind of power and it was on a Seattle-Utah road trip. Otherwise, the four cylinder more than meets my needs. I don't track my cars and I live in a congested, urban area. I have all of the options that came on a 2014 X1: Panoramic sunroof, Nav, backup camera, parking sensors, H/K stereo, leather, sports seats, etc. It's great, but I've never felt that I'm missing a hydraulic suspension or "torque vectoring".
-James
Seattle, WA
Last edited by wwahl; 06-20-2019 at 02:23 AM. Reason: replied to the wrong email.
#30
Instructor
Clearly Porsche North America disagrees with you, because they choose to offer a base Macan, a Boxster with a four cylinder, etc. Sportiness is about agility, handling, light weight, torsional rigidity, etc. Not just brute horsepower.
I've been a BMW and Audi driver ever since buying my first car. The open roads where you can use 400 hp and 400 lb-ft of torque are few and far between. On the Long Island Expressway on a weekday, you're lucky to get over 30mph. The sorts of people who can afford to spend $100,000+ on a car are typically clustered in cities. And just about every major city in this country is booming, getting more crowded and having more traffic. I'm genuinely curious how this all plays out, because it feels like Porsche is painting itself into a corner with higher prices to justify higher performance that fewer and fewer people can actually tap into.
-James
Seattle, WA