[quote name='mick968' date='Jun 26 2006, 10:38 AM']Some of the maintenance or repair scenarios you are portraying are just the price you pay for owning a Porsche.[/quote]
Perhaps. But the car's been basically flawless (well, there was that transmission thing, but that wasn't its fault) until about a year ago, and then like a wave, everything went wrong. If I got 10 years out of a new Boxster before the wave hit, I'd be ahead. And a lot of the stuff that the 968 requires, the 987 wouldn't; the 987 has a timing chain, for instance, not a belt. A glass rear window. Rubber and seals and gaskets and etc. that aren't 12 years old. The list goes on.
[quote name='mick968' date='Jun 26 2006, 10:38 AM'](in St.Louis)[/quote]
Whereabouts? I'm flying in on Wednesday for a long 4th of July holiday. Hitting the Katy Trail, etc. Splitting my time between Ladue (McKnight & 40) and Chesterfield (roughly 141 and 40). Won't have a Porsche with me <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.gif" class="smilie" alt="" /> but will likely have a 330Ci drop-top, an '01 with under 10K on it. (We don't drive our cars much! I've put ~28K on my 968 in the past 6 years, and I live in SoCal where it's always Porsche weather! <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
Oh, btw, you can just barely fit two sets of clubs in the trunk of a 968 Cab, even if the forward part is taken up with a small subwoofer enclosure. Trust me.
[quote name='mick968' date='Jun 26 2006, 10:38 AM']Ocassionally,the expense of the maintenance or repairs does get frustrating but if you want be in the "There is no substitute" automobile it is what it is.[/quote]
Again, it's not the expense per se, it's the age of the car and the sense that /everything/ is starting to go wrong. A switch here, a cruise control brain there, an opaque plastic window on the back, a leaking reservoir on the front...
I'm not thinking about leaving the marque, just debating whether I want to pour money into Sartoris or put the money instead into a Boxster.
Hmm. Maybe I'll compromise. Get a Cayman and set aside Sartoris for a rebuild as $$ permits.
Right now, just gotta get out there and find a real job, as soon as my current project finishes winding down. (I'm basically irreplaceable; it would take as long to get a replacement up to speed as the project has life left in it, so as a courtesy -- to some prominent folks in my industry -- I'm sticking around until it's over. A few months of continued scholastic-style poverty in exchange for not burning some key bridges will, I think, prove to be the best route through this. But for the nonce, it hurts! =)