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Somewhat Heroic posted:Right - they aren't 10 years old yet but people mourned their passing nearly immediately once revealed the new M3's were going to be turbocharged and have electric power steering. The options for the E92 (coupe) are far more plentiful because they went through 2013 and made up over 60% of production for USA/Canada (~22% for sedan, the remainder convertible). You can find a whole mess of juicy data on production breakdown (transmission, color, year, options) via this big spreadsheet here: http://www.m3post.com/forums/showthread.php?t=863761 I've been looking at e46 M3's the past year or so, but by next year when I'm ready to buy I don't know if I'll end up with an e9x instead depending on the pricing. Or just another e86. Those have been pretty stable in the mid-20's the past couple years. e85's have been going down though. If you want a fast convertible you can find good drivers listed for around $15k if you look long enough.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 19:12 |
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# ? May 5, 2024 18:02 |
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OP wouldnt be in this situation if he didn't take 3 years to decide which car to buy
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 19:32 |
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I've been seeing some really haggard E46 M3s lately...
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 19:55 |
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Human Grand Prix posted:I always thought the Turbo and GT3 variants of the 996 were well regarded? They are, plus GT2s. They all have the same bulletproof race-derived engine that's hitting mythical status now and stucturally 996s and 997s are pretty much the same so they're great packages. Sure air cooled is great but they aren't going to be hitting 600hp with minimal work while being daily drivers while the 997.2 and up cars have different designs. They're probably better engines but they're unproven and pedigree matters to collectors. Somewhat Heroic posted:I agree with all of this. People hate on the 996 because it is practically a meme to do so and the popular thing. The people who can look past that are buying them up and showing how capable they are. Jymmybob picked up a sweetheart of a turbo that will annihilate nearly all of the cars in his general vicinity for the price most people are spending on some dumb SUV and less than a bro-truck. There is no doubt they will go up in price. I was seriously considering getting one over my E90, but practicality of four doors won out for me. When I am ready for a 911 I will buy the newest turbo 911 my money will get me. Don't forget my rear end-grade 996 C2 that's as bad as the TT is nice. I think the 996s are stable for the foreseeable future but the M96 is going to keep them from appreciating much when M97 cars start getting under 30k and something similar will play out with Boxsters and Caymans.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 19:57 |
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Perhaps I missed it, but what constitutes a good deal on a 996? Because all of them for sale within 500 miles of me are mid 20's for a non turbo, rwd model with some miles on it, 70k for a 2006 turbo s, 35k for a c4s... none of that strikes me as bargain level.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 21:35 |
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I think something in the 15-18k range for an early 996 non-turbo that isn't prone to the IMS issue.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 21:39 |
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<$20K for an early 996 in nice shape and not crazy miles is a decent deal. Up to early 2000 M.Y. they were less prone to the IMS failure due to a slightly different design, even though the hysteria hit them just as hard. People poo poo on the interiors too, and to be fair they aren't fantastic, but it's a 20+ year old design at this point (95-96) so of course the interior isn't great. Still, certainly better than the 993 they replaced. The TTs are to this day something to be reckoned with and even plain Carreras are not exactly slow cars. I still periodically troll the local craigs/kijiji for TTs.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 22:07 |
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The 993's interior looks like it's out of a 70s Fiat. It was pretty bad even by the standards of the time.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 22:09 |
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Thanks, but I am not sure that $20k is a good deal for one of those just yet. Maybe at half that cost. Reason being the IMS issue as mentioned earlier, and the fact I can get some other truly spectacular cars from the same era for less money, maybe even 2 for the same money. M5, M3, M roadster, Z06, maybe an early CTS-V. I don't think the 996 is quite to the point where its value will rise just because its a Porsche. I remember 10 years ago people were saying what a great deal a boxster was at $15-20k prices and look where they are now. Its not that I don't want a 996 or think its an inherently bad car, I just think it needs more time before values start to appreciate.
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# ? Aug 2, 2017 22:32 |
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rdb posted:Thanks, but I am not sure that $20k is a good deal for one of those just yet. Maybe at half that cost. Reason being the IMS issue as mentioned earlier, and the fact I can get some other truly spectacular cars from the same era for less money, maybe even 2 for the same money. M5, M3, M roadster, Z06, maybe an early CTS-V. I don't think the 996 is quite to the point where its value will rise just because its a Porsche. I remember 10 years ago people were saying what a great deal a boxster was at $15-20k prices and look where they are now. You will never find a good running 996 for 10 grand. A junked out POS one? Maybe. But not one that anyone would want to have as a car they drive even 3-4 weekends per month.
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 00:17 |
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I'm not saying now. Im saying that they have further down, way further down, to go in their depreciation curve before they become a good buy. Lets check back in 5 years if SA is still around. E: I thought the point of this thread was to find cars you could buy now that would be worth more in the future. I don't see the non turbo 996 falling into this category yet. rdb fucked around with this message at 00:27 on Aug 3, 2017 |
# ? Aug 3, 2017 00:25 |
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rdb posted:I'm not saying now. Im saying that they have further down, way further down, to go in their depreciation curve before they become a good buy. Lets check back in 5 years if SA is still around. And I'm saying that you will never, even in 5 years, or 10, find a 996 for 10 grand. At least not one you would want. Hell, you can barely find a lovely old Boxster, not even a Boxster S, that's really worth owning for 10 grand. e: and I'm not talking about ones that have blown up motors, or need bodywork, or with destroyed interiors. I mean ones you could buy, spend a couple grand on baseline maintenance, and drive happily several times a week.
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 00:32 |
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Heres the boxsters off my local CL https://evansville.craigslist.org/cto/d/porsche-boxster-9500-obo/6225786355.html https://evansville.craigslist.org/cto/d/1999-porsche-boxster/6222501378.html https://evansville.craigslist.org/cto/d/2000-porsche-boxster/6185166167.html The last one is an S for $12k, its on CL I'm sure it can be talked down. In fact, this is the only one I see someone asking more than $10k for. If I branch out, I see cars in the daily driver category for <$6k. https://louisville.craigslist.org/cto/d/99-porsche-boxster/6199255148.html If I really dig on auto trader I can find clean 996 cars for $13-15k already. Mid 20's is not their low point.
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 00:53 |
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To be completely safe just save up and get a 996 GT2 because in 10 years half of them will be gone along with their owners and there weren't many to start with.
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 01:24 |
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Did anyone say Lancer Evolutions yet? Low mileage versions may be worth something in 10 years.
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 01:57 |
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gently caress, they already are
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 02:13 |
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MrLogan posted:Did anyone say Lancer Evolutions yet? Low mileage versions may be worth something in 10 years. Prices would have to go down first for them to be affordable.
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# ? Aug 3, 2017 03:14 |
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quote:there are fields of rust free cars from the 20s through to today across the south west of the United States If only that were true. California has been scoured 20 ways to Tuesday for classic cars for 30 or so years. Arizona, NV and NM had small populations in the classic car era so correspondingly less cars to begin with. Anything left sitting 'in the wild' has an owner who thinks it is worth far more than it should be. There are places with fields of cars (Desert Valley in PHX comes to mind) but they know exactly what those cars are worth and they aren't cheap. The days of getting cars like big block road runners in need of a mild resto for $1000 are long, long gone. You can find deals now and then (or, more often: hear of them) but it is rare. On thread topic: I think the latemodel challengers will be worth something someday. Everyone seems to like them, decent engine, etc. The used ones need to come down in price soon though so I can justify buying one to thrash on for a toy.
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# ? Sep 9, 2017 20:04 |
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Kurten posted:California has been scoured 20 ways to Tuesday for classic cars for 30 or so years. Arizona, NV and NM had small populations in the classic car era so correspondingly less cars to begin with. Anything left sitting 'in the wild' has an owner who thinks it is worth far more than it should be. There are places with fields of cars (Desert Valley in PHX comes to mind) but they know exactly what those cars are worth and they aren't cheap. The days of getting cars like big block road runners in need of a mild resto for $1000 are long, long gone. You can find deals now and then (or, more often: hear of them) but it is rare. Best thing to do now is to look for unfinished projects from someone who needs it gone. Might cost more than a shell that has been sitting in a desert for 50 years but you usually get tons of other stuff with it.
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# ? Sep 9, 2017 21:45 |
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# ? May 5, 2024 18:02 |
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Human Grand Prix posted:The 993's interior looks like it's out of a 70s Fiat. It was pretty bad even by the standards of the time. I always thought that was part of the appeal
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# ? Sep 10, 2017 01:37 |