Jump to content

evo Car of the Year 2015


carl1647545492
 Share

Recommended Posts

In 5 years or so a GT4 will be on my short list if used prices are within reach.

 

They are currently trading for $10k over sticker with 1500 miles or less. The only positive sign is Porsche recently released more allocations. Most dealers are still selling at sticker so the more allocations the better the second hand market. The issue is, even with more allocations it's not even a dent in the list of people hoping to pick one up. My good friend who sells for Byers has been trying to get me an allocation since our turbo got destroyed and can't make it happen.

 

Given recent history of GT cars, in 5 years you might be able to buy a high mileage example for $75-ish. But this is a new GT car and it's still too early to really predict the trend

 

My 11 year old GT car with 35k miles on it (and a butt load of track time) is still worth 65-70% of its new value.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They make no note of the gt4 gearing, interesting.

 

It's a completely overblown complaint in my opinion. If you need to find a fault then yes the gearing could be shorter, but the gearing is effectively the same as the 996 GT3, 997.1 GT3, 997.1 GT3 RS and 997.2 GT3. ( critics complained there too and then quickly forgot).

 

Only the 3.8 RS and 4.0 RS got shorter gears.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They are currently trading for $10k over sticker with 1500 miles or less. The only positive sign is Porsche recently released more allocations. Most dealers are still selling at sticker so the more allocations the better the second hand market. The issue is, even with more allocations it's not even a dent in the list of people hoping to pick one up. My good friend who sells for Byers has been trying to get me an allocation since our turbo got destroyed and can't make it happen.

 

Given recent history of GT cars, in 5 years you might be able to buy a high mileage example for $75-ish. But this is a new GT car and it's still too early to really predict the trend

 

My 11 year old GT car with 35k miles on it (and a butt load of track time) is still worth 65-70% of its new value.

 

I guess simple folk like myself will stick to American cars that have good old depreciation. :lolguy:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's a completely overblown complaint in my opinion. If you need to find a fault then yes the gearing could be shorter, but the gearing is effectively the same as the 996 GT3, 997.1 GT3, 997.1 GT3 RS and 997.2 GT3. ( critics complained there too and then quickly forgot).

 

Only the 3.8 RS and 4.0 RS got shorter gears.

 

That's cool. I only mentioned it because like you said, it's literally the only complaint I've heard about them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's cool. I only mentioned it because like you said, it's literally the only complaint I've heard about them.

 

I guess the difference with the GT4 is it shares a gearbox with....cayman s and GTS and as such nobody currently offers replacement gears since it's not a Motorsport box. BGB has a couple of options but they are not proving to have long term reliability in the race cars.

 

GT3's have the same box as a cup car. There are 3 shorter ring and pinion sets available as well as nearly endless options for individual gear sets. So GT3 guys can do something about the gearing "issue" is they please.

 

At Mid Ohio the shorter gearing isn't worth squat. At other tracks it's a distinct advantage but I've never been able to justify the cost of the upgrade.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...