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9A2B4 forum

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9.8K views 29 replies 19 participants last post by  JazzCatGab  
#1 · (Edited)
When we began, this forum could have been called 9A2B4, Mid-Engine Porsche, New Cayman/Boxster, or 718 -- they were all synonymous and exclusive tags for our cars.

Since that may not always be the case, I have a formula for continuing harmony and celebration of all our rides: Ignore cylinder count. Focus instead on engine architecture and efficiency as measured by specific power output (hp/torque per liter).

By that view -- and putting aside the GT cars as track-oriented specials -- all current Porsche sportscars, rear and mid-engine, share a common turbocharged flat/boxer engine architecture (9A2) with one of two common cylinder shapes and center-bore spacings (call them over-square and big-bore). They all make roughly 140-150 hp/liter (depending on boost and turbocharger size); and all share the distinctive turbo-torque plateau making for a power curve with high average-to-peak ratio (as a result, peak horsepower metric alone tends to understate their real-world performance).

Now it's possible to describe the 9A2 line by total displacement and cylinder-shape alone, without referencing cylinder-count:
2.0 over-square
2.5 big-bore
3.0 over-square
3.8 big-bore

So what? Well I think if we looked at our cars (and their place in the Porsche lineup) this way instead of four-versus-six there would be less angst felt and expressed on this forum. The cylinder-count metric has become overloaded with meaning, I believe, in a way that distracts from a pure engineering analysis and appreciation of these cars/engines.
 
Discussion starter · #3 · (Edited)
I would be a bit sad if it has depreciated a large amount more than a 6 cylinder mode
I suspect that any potential F6 718 of similar power** to your H4 will, after 5 years, have depreciated to a point where the delta in residual value is less than you spent on your costliest option. And way less than what you saved by shopping for CPO, dealer leftover type best deals originally (if you did that).

In the big picture this relative depreciation comparison is over-blown I think, but in any case it sounds like you're in the best position to beat the curve by amortizing a car you love over a long period. *That* is ultimately going to keep more money in your pocket than frequently turning-over cars with slightly less steep depreciation curve....

So relax about depreciation and continue to appreciate your 9A2B4 (along with Randy Pobst and Tom Murphy at Ward Automotive among many experts).

**just to make this a like-to-like hypothetical comparison apart from cylinder-count