Porsche Cayman S Extra Pics

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Young_Warrior

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-Topgear.com

The car industry loves its fads. 2004 was the year of the supercar. 2005 is the year of the super saloon. Now 2006 looks like being the year of the super-coupe...

Kicking the excitement off is the Porsche Cayman S, the fixed-roof, hatchback-equipped two-seater based on the Boxster. Or look at it another way and it's a junior 911.

The mid-mounted 3.4-litre flat-six engine has a Variocam Plus variable valve timing and lift system nabbed straight from the entry-level 911 Carrera.

With 295bhp delivered at 6,250rpm, it produces just 30bhp less, propelling a car that's a useful 55kg lighter.

0-62mph passes in 5.4 seconds, before a 171mph maximum. Could you really be left wanting for more?

Take a look inside the wheelarches and the links continue. The brakes are also from the 911, Brembo calipers shrouding vast 318mm front and 299mm rear cross-drilled, inner-ventilated discs.

The same Porsche Active Suspension Management switchable damping system can also be fitted, albeit as a £1,030 optional extra.

Then there's the steep windscreen and gently curving roofline. You know you've seen that profile somewhere else before.

The thing is, at £43,930, the Cayman S is a considerable £14,450 cheaper than an entry-level 911. And unlike that car, its engine is positioned for perfect weight distribution and balance.

The fixed roof ensures that it's also a remarkable 100 per cent more resistant to corner-to-corner structural flexing than the equivalent Boxster S, making for even greater handling precision.

Inevitably, this is set to be one of next year's most desirable new cars. Which could well explain why Mercedes is rumoured to be working on a similarly driver-focused coupe, based on the SLK. The same goes for BMW: prepare for news of a Cayman-rivalling Z4 Coupe, any moment now...

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Do you have to copy and paste everything direct from TopGear without giving them the credit for it?
 
It's copyright, you have to credit a source. *****y at times, yes, but it's the law.
 
I'm sure TopGear care that people are stealing their info without giving them credit.

There are laws on copyright you know. It's a simple thing to put "Found on Top Gear" at the bottom of your posts.
 
Woah! I'm enthralled at this totally new design! THe Porsche design team has really outdone themselves this time around. I've never seen anything like this before. Best new design of the year, anyone?
 
pom-pousssss......

No. The Cayman is ugly. If they raised the height on the rear wheel humps, we'll talk. But, otherwise, it looks like some demorphed creature.
 
I've seen one of these at a porsche show a few weeks ago, all i can say is it looks :yuck: :crazy: from some angles. But then again i think the boxster is ugly. I bet it will be a brilliant car but i'm not really a big fan of porsches, i find them a bit boring.
 
Its pretty much a boxster coupe as far as styling goes, just don't say that to any porsche reps. I also am not a big fan of the cars styling.
 
I love the Cayman. It isn't the prettiest thing to roll out of the "house of Porsche". But adding a roof to the Boxster improves the rigidity of the most rigid of roadsters.
Yes, it could be considered an entry level 911.
How, bad is it to be compared to the 911, favorably?

Add to that the fact that when Alois Ruf gets his grubby paws on one, it will make a stock 911 look like weak tea.
 
Well, the design could be improved, but it's the first "sportscar" that Porsche's got right in a long time. If not for the blasted "traditional" layout of the 911, this is the car that Porsche should have been making from the beginning.

One can only hope.
 
VIPFREAK
... I still don't see the point of this car but ho well...

The point of this car is so Porsche can have an entry level (if you can call 60 large "entry level") hard top sports car again. The 911 has moved upmarket and become a GT.

Ultimately, the layout of the Cayman will prove superior to the 911. The Cayman S is already a more capable track car than the base Carrera.

I'm trying very hard to justify this car on a practical and economic level as an eventual replacement for what I'm driving now. The more I read about it, the more interested I become. At this point I wouldn't hesitate to take a new Cayman S over a 2 year old 996.


M
 

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