987 Spyder - a new owner’s perspective.
#1
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987 Spyder - a new owner’s perspective.
As my signature shows, I have had quite a range of Porsches. The desire for a 987 Spyder came from the joys of driving a ‘99 Boxster and my recollection of my Cayman R. It seemed to be the car that would meld the best of both.
To the best of my knowledge there are only three 987 Spyders in New Zealand. Two were brought in new and one was near new ex UK. My UK import will be number four. Three are PDK, one is manual.
The car spec is what I would have ordered new. I get that some see the manual as the pinnacle and I agree on open roads, however given my local traffic and my height (6’ 4”) I wanted PDK. I still have the manual Boxster and 964 for that stick shift fix.
The car was purchased in the UK, in mid April, put in a container and shipped half way around the World. I received it last week so I’m still working things out.
To the best of my knowledge there are only three 987 Spyders in New Zealand. Two were brought in new and one was near new ex UK. My UK import will be number four. Three are PDK, one is manual.
The car spec is what I would have ordered new. I get that some see the manual as the pinnacle and I agree on open roads, however given my local traffic and my height (6’ 4”) I wanted PDK. I still have the manual Boxster and 964 for that stick shift fix.
The car was purchased in the UK, in mid April, put in a container and shipped half way around the World. I received it last week so I’m still working things out.
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John McM (07-07-2019)
#3
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The car came out of the container and had inspections for plant material and emissions. It passed both. The freight forwarder was very keen for me to pick the car up. Unfortunately, it had little gas and a battery with only one start in it. I stopped for gas and couldn’t restart it, neither could I open the bonnet. To make it worse, I was blocking a gas pump lane. YouTube helped with instructions but not before I had pushed the red plastic connector out the back of the fuse box. A screwdriver helped take off the cover, then a jump pack allowed me to get the car to the parking area where I called for a new battery. That sorted, I finally got her in my garage.
Last edited by John McM; 07-07-2019 at 04:10 AM.
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#4
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The first port of call was the manual to find out why my PSM had alarmed. Thankfully, it was due to the battery problems and was ok on the second start.
Next up was a check of the car, believe it or not there is only one stone chip and the front spoiler lips are perfect. Either this car has been thoroughly sorted pre purchase or has been pampered. I think a bit of both.
BTW the top removal and fitting process is very easy when done once. I wouldn’t rate it as difficult at all.
Last edited by John McM; 07-07-2019 at 03:15 AM.
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#5
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With the inspection over I took it for a drive. Very reminiscent of the R. It feels like a go-kart at the expense of low speed ride quality. I’m driving in Sport mode, but only around the neighbourhood until it’s complied for road use. That meant that I took the ‘99 Boxster for a back road run with friends. A lot more compliant but I had to work the engine to keep up. I think the Spyder would have been near the front of the pack, but not ahead of the 3.8 GT3. What a noise that makes.
#7
Burning Brakes
Wow. Congrat's looks like you have the best of both worlds in your garage.
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John McM (07-07-2019)
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#8
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She looks like a beauty John, congrats!
Hope the registration process goes quick so you can get her out on some back roads and really enjoy it the way it’s meant to be enjoyed.
Hope the registration process goes quick so you can get her out on some back roads and really enjoy it the way it’s meant to be enjoyed.
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John McM (07-07-2019)
#10
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It’s interesting to me that NZ had 13 examples out of the RHD Turbo 3.6 when they were rarer than RHD Spyders. For some reason Boxster and Caymans didn’t sell well new in NZ, but dominate used imports. Maybe it was a pricing issue and people defaulted to 911s? Now the trend is for people to buy new GT cars rather than cooking variety 911s. The World is changing.
#11
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On another point, I’ve lost a few kg and fit really well in the buckets but lack some backside padding. I love the way the seat inserts come out. Has anyone made up new inserts? I’m thinking custom memory foam made for my physique and maybe pepita cloth.
addendum: just found this https://rennlist.com/forums/991-gt3-...911r-50th.html
Last edited by John McM; 07-07-2019 at 04:23 PM.
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John McM (07-07-2019)
#13
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Lovely intro to your spyder. Congrats and so glad the journey to the Kiwi land was uneventful. Looks to be in good fettle considering the miles. It certainly is a Bantam weight David in the world of overpowered Goliaths.
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John McM (07-08-2019)
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Just know that not all pepitas are created equal! There are lots of sources and upholstery folks that sell "pepita" in various grades, but If you want the real McCoy -- i.e., genuine OEM pepita such as that used by Porsche in the 50th Anniv. 911 -- your sources are extremely limited and you WILL pay for it. If you don't need/want OEM, then there are plenty of options available that are fairly reasonably priced.