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number9ine

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Posts posted by number9ine

  1. The last week the high coolant temp light has been flashing a couple of times. Engine temp has been normal. I have stopped the car and when I start up the problem is gone.

    When the lights came on I had just been driving for 10 minutes and not hard at all. The level on the expansion tank has been normal.

    I have checked for any trouble codes with Digimoto software but there is none.

    What can cause this problem, what should I check?

    If you're checking your level after just a few minutes you may try removing, examining and re-seating the expansion tank cap. If there's a leak in the cap seal it could explain the flashing light (which is a low coolant level warning), and after a short drive the water level may return to normal before your visual inspection. Loren's probably right that the sensor in the tank is faulty, but there's the odd chance that it's a leak of some sort and a longer drive may result in an expansion tank overflow and overheat.

    Mark

  2. I found the tabs on the carpeted cover, but I don't know what to do next. Something's apparently loose inside and rattles around with a distinct metal-on-plastic thump and clatter on hard right turns. '05 C2S 6-speed.

    Hi 355,

    Gently pull off the woofer port covers on either side, exposing two Torx screws. After removing those the unit should slide out just fine.

    The covers are for the LATCH car seat system, there's nothing you need to remove there.

    Mark

    • Upvote 1
  3. Hello,

    I have a 993(05) with air bag light on. PST2- "Control unit faulty". Cannot erase.

    Replaced new CU with 996 number. Tried PST2 - display "Airbag?". Cannot detect software.

    Any one had this problem.

    1911auto

    Hi,

    If you have a 2005 911 it's a 997, not a 993. Is that a typo or am I not understanding your situation?

    I'm not sure what the proper part number is for your airbag controller but if the the new one differs from the original then it may be incompatible with your car. If your car is a 997 my understanding is that you need a PIWIS for certain functions instead of a PST2. If your car is a 993 then there should be no part number starting with 996 anywhere in it.

    I'll wait for someone to chime in with more info, but in the meantime you may consider cross-posting this in the 997 forum.

    Mark

  4. I am a new 2nd owner of a 2001 Boxster 2.7. Previous owner did all maintenance at dealer and car looks like it's never been driven in the rain, no leaks either. Should I be concerned about the IMS with this many miles on it and no problems? Would getting the IMS replaced as precaution be a wise decision? This is my first p-car but I have owned many VW's. This car is incredible just want to drive it everywhere!

    No.

    Mark

  5. The power difference between them is ridiculous, the wr does have more torque but the yzs horsepower just blows it away.

    Just saw this and thought to comment on it: Torque is the definitive measurement of acceleration, and faster acceleration is your stated goal. The tradeoff of torque for additional horsepower would leave you at a disadvantage at corner exit speeds or at highway speeds, all for a gain of a few mph top speed (horsepower). Considering your car's stock top speed can be legally and safely achieved in few places, you may consider seeking mods that improve your torque response in the midrange instead of focusing on increased hp numbers and higher redline. Horsepower may increase with greater torque, but torque doesn't necessarily increase with added HP.

    Mark

  6. One other note number9ine I still passed the S4s, I just thought I should be blowing them away in my car.

    With some more track time, the gap between you and other (possibly more powerful) cars will increase. From your responses here it's apparent you're looking for people with like minds to agree with you on modifications to your car, and don't subscribe to the idea of buying a higher hp car now or learning the dynamic limits of your current car. I wish you luck in seeking additional straight-line performance from your car, and I hope the associated expense and risk isn't untenable.

    Best of luck.

    Mark

  7. I have a 2004 996 C4S and I put in Fab speed 996 Sport Catalytic Converter X-Pipe and now the acceleration is not as brisk as it could be till it reaches 3500 rpms and then it kits in and is very fast. What would cause this? There are no faults in the computer.

    Exhaust backpressure can affect the torque characteristics of your car, which is why the stock exhaust is tuned carefully to optimize power delivery in all operating states. Any modification to that may yield extra power in one state while robbing your car of power in another.

    If you replace with the stock part, does the problem go away? That's your first troubleshooting step. If re-fitting the stock exhaust solves the issue, then it's a matter of deciding whether you want that extra power up top, or reliable power across the board. I'd choose the latter.

    Mark

  8. I am at an impass, went to VIR (track in danville VA) to an audi event and drove my 2008 997.1 s... Killed most of the cars on the corners but was dissaponted with my cars power on the straights.

    Awesome! Was it an instructed event? First time out? 997s are wondeful track cars. If this wasn't some sort of timed event or race, I humbly suggest that you might instead concentrate on being smooth and consistent and not worry about what's behind of or ahead of you. The "red mist" is tough to avoid, but it's worth it if you can.

    I looked in to trading on a 2010 GT3, but my car has way too much negative equity to trade for at least 3 years.

    That's a tough situation to be in, sorry to hear it. All the more reason, IMO, to love what you have, which is an excellent car. If you can avoid the upgrade bug for a few more years you'll be able to turn your car into something liquid and step up to whatever's latest and greatest. If you spend a lot of money now trying to "fix" your car, it will just increase the equity gap.

    Not that it's my business but since you've raised the subject of money: If you're considering a swap because you can't get financed on a new GT3 with your rollover debt but can finance engine upgrades with cash or revolving debt, I suggest putting the cash into your car note, or leaving the credit card in your wallet. A Porsche is truly a luxury good and almost never a good financial investment, but even a diehard enthusiast would be hard pressed to pour money into a depreciating asset owned by the bank with cash due at sale.

    So my question is if anyone has debated putting the motor out of a wrecked GT3 or turbo in their car? Does the GT3 share the same tranny as the S? And does anyone else like the idea of a GT3 swap. Also I noticed that TPC now has a Turbo kit for the 997 claiming 515hp. I know that Paul Speed had a bad experience with his brothers supercharger, but could that have been remedied with a better oil seperator, and could you get 50,000miles out of the motor with that mod on it.

    Since you've done some reading here let me start by repeating what you probably already know: There's precious little performance to gain from your car without spending a LOT of money.

    I don't think I've seen a GT3 swap in a 997, although I do believe it's been done on a 996. Anything's possible, but the GT3 is more than just your 911 with a dry-sump motor; everything has been tuned, upgraded or optimized for the GT1 motor's output. I imagine that the money spent doing this could easily eclipse the finance and depreciation costs of upgrading to a GT3. The turbo and SC kits are expensive, and hard to justify considering all the 996 turbos out there--for cheaper money than your current car--that reliably put down GT3 HP and nice, flat torque.

    Lastly if all of the above will not work does anyone know roughly what I could expect from a carboni Cai, softronic ecu upgrade and a full exhaust (AWE?) including the high flow cats. I know most of you are sick of this topic, but your insight is greatly appreciated. I am the gut who posted a couple of months back on more power from PSE. Also does anyone know which aftermarket exhaust sounds most like the PSE, I love the sound and definately could use it even louder. Sorry for the 9million questions

    I never tire of this topic, because despite being posted many times by many people the answer seems to fall on deaf ears. Here it is, tailored to your context: You can expect to spend about $1-5000 on the intake/exhaust/chip trilogy and still be disappointed on the straights when any car with higher displacement or forced induction blows your doors off. Plain as that.

    Here are a few options available that might suit your need for extra speed:

    1. Buy a cheaper but more powerful car (996 TT, vette, etc.) once you have enough cash to wipe out your negative equity. Maybe you'd like owning one of those Audis that made you see red mist.
    2. Buy a momentum car, like a Miata, and track it. Learn to live without all the motor you already have, so that you hone your driving skills to the point where the extra power is just a bonus. Like you, my car is a 997.1S and I have dreams of stepping up to the GT3, but at the end of the day I can't come close to mastering the capabilities of my car and I've been driving on the track for years now. My next car is probably a 912, less is more sometimes.
    3. Stay off the racetrack and hit the drag strip instead, where far less money will get you far more speed and bragging rights. A little NOS goes a long way, live life a quarter mile at a time, etc.

    I hope that you understand my perspective just as I'm trying to understand yours. You have a great car, some say the best car. Taking the original and attempting to improve it may yield a lesser product, and few have been demonstrated to refine Porsche's formula without a lot of time, money and know-how. There are faster cars, better-handling cars, and more exclusive cars, but your Porsche is in rare company and the sum of its parts is arguably greater than cars that cost twice as much. Enjoy.cheers.gif

    Mark

  9. Hey Mark,

    Let me clarify and reiterate a few things. I'm not a Porsche expert, but alot of what a PPI does is inspect things that are non-Porsche specific. I can perform those things myself (conditions of suspension/visible bushings/leaks/brake pads/lighting/seals/exhaust system/outside ends of steering system/wheel bearings/belt/etc.)

    If they haven't been recently, I can change the spark plugs and examine them for even wear and lack of problem signs.

    I can also learn a tremendous amount on here about common problem areas, and inspect those (coolant cap, for example).

    My point is: I own the car and I can do alot of the inspections myself, and am knowledgable enough to cover almost everything.

    Maybe I'm very wrong or foolish about that, but my experiences with cars is that a knowledgeable eye can identify almost anything a mechanic can during an inspection. And

    the things that go wrong without warning won't be caught anyway.

    Joe, if you would rather invest the time than money for inspection then by all means, do so. Just keep in mind that isn't equal to a knowledgeable eye examining your car because as you admit, you're no Porsche expert. And that goes for the typical things you may look at, like suspension bits, leaks, bushings, etc. Sometimes knowing where to look or what to look for is worth a penny. Yes the car has a suspension. Is it in an unusual configuration for a production car? Yes. Yes the car has an engine. Is it a flat-six--extremely rare for a modern engine--with its own set of maintenance gotchas and failure modes? Yes. My point is you'll be learning along the way, instead of spending a little cash to benefit from someone else's knowledge early on. You may benefit financially in the long run, but if something goes wrong that a Porsche tech would've caught and you didn't, please believe me when I say it's likely to cost far more than a PPI.

    Regarding being a maintenance ****....I simply meant that I will strive to keep everything up to date and well taken care of, and if I'm not sure about something I'll replace it or service it to be safe.

    No doubt you will. I do very little of my own mechanical work and would love to do more, but my time at home is very limited. I follow the same mantra as you and agree that it's better safe than sorry, regardless of whether someone else is doing it or I am. If you can DIY and achieve the same result, that's a good thing. Seems this is your bottom line:

    I'm taking this car with the hope of only paying out toes and fingers to keep it running. If a clutch goes, I'll tackle it myself. If the crank walks, it'll be a parts car or sold whole to someone wanting a project.

    Since this means you'll be your own mechanic on the car, then PM porschelibrarian and get yourself the technical manual for your car. One day when I catch up on sleep dry.gif I hope to find a nice older P-car (maybe an early 912) to wrench on myself. Until then, post about what you do to and with your car so we can all live vicariously through you. Take pictures too, we want to see your car! cheers.gif

    Mark

  10. Dear all

    engine oil failure indicator came on twice while driving home today

    I stopped the car and did the measurement with the trip computer which indicated engine oil on the max level

    any ideas?

    Thanks

    cg

    Was it the oil pressure warning lamp under the speedometer? If so, I recommend you stop driving the car until you find out what's causing the low oil pressure. Oil starvation may cost you an engine, and could have any number of causes. Are there any leaks under your car? Have you had any maintenance performed recently?

    EDIT: Just browsed the 996 GT3 owner's manual, and the text "Failure Indicator" with the oil icon in the OBC means that the "oil pressure indicator is faulty." If that's what you saw, hopefully it's the only thing gone wrong. I'd still avoid driving and have everything checked out to be sure.

  11. ...I'm not a Porsche expert and my funds will need to be saved. I'll skip the PPI for now, though I may throw an extra $50 at Porsche when I get a yearly emissions/inspection to examine a few things. I can examine 95% of parts myself though, so I figure I'll save the cash smile.gif

    ...My dad's got it in pretty decent shape overall, but I'm a maintenance **** in terms of keeping things mechanically sound.

    These two statements are incongruous. $50 isn't going to buy you much of anything from your local Porsche dealer, and the $250 or so that a proper PPI at an indy mechanic will buy you is a fraction of the cheapest maintenance item on your car. Being a "maintenance ****" is a great thing on these cars, because the relative cost of failures on your car could eclipse its market value at a stroke. PPI is cheap insurance, and it gives you a complete laundry list of things that will need your attention.

    Good luck and enjoy!

    Mark

  12. I've had strut mounts go on non-P-cars I've owned in the past, and a crashing noise over bumps is definitely a symptom. As far as your struts go, they can definitely show their age without failing. Does the car hop when you hit expansion joints, or continue to track straight? Do you feel unnecessary rebound when camber changes abruptly in turns? I would say those are signs that you should replace the struts.

    Do you feel a lot of driveline vibration? If one of the motor or trans mounts has failed, you'll get some nasty noises over bumps. Considering your car's age and track history, I wouldn't rule this out even if it's not the cause of your current problem.

    You mention you track the car. Are you running on the track tires, or do you have a separate set for the street? What brand and spec are they? The PS2s my car was sold with made a horrific hollow banging noise over every rut, expansion joint, and pothole they found--even with zero miles on the tread. Currently running Contis that are quiet as a mouse by conparison. As I'm sure you know, once tires are heat-cycled a few times they become very loud and hard.

    Hope this helps.

    Mark

  13. Update: seems the paint I received from Dr. ColorChip is the cause of the mismatch. Initial order they sent me was not even close:

    I email them, and they tell me they're going to send another bottle. New bottle is an even worse mismatch than the first. I think they're just winging things over there. See below:

    Instead I have the local PPG distributor mix up a batch from their computer database, and bingo, virtually perfect match and a hell of a lot less expensive.

    Sorry to hear that Dr. ColorChip fudged it, I imagine white is a tough color to match for their system. I have DCC in Ocean Blue for my wife's car and it's a perfect match (once it's dry).

    The actual name of your paint, FYI, is Carrara White, not Carrera. It's named for the region of Italy that supplies white marble famously used in Michelangelo's David, among other things.

    Mark

  14. Hi all,

    New member here; hopefully a long-time member smile.gif

    I'm buying my first house with a 2-car garage, which is the "trigger" for my father to pass on his Lapis Blue 5-speed 99 Boxster to me. He's not really driving it anymore, and has wanted to pass it on.

    It has 56k miles on it and has only gotten about 4k miles in the past few years. It's fairly well taken care of, in that the only known immediate repair needed is the horn beeping issue (which it seems I can do myself with one or two unique tools and a home depot run).

    I'm writing today to prepare for the upcoming ownership and some immediate things I'd like to address. Some questions, in no particular order:

    1. The gearbox feels super stiff. What is the enthusiast community recommended gearbox fluid?

    1a. Is the trans a typical drain from a bottom bolt and pump new fluid into a top bolt? Will I be able to easily see these when I jack up the car?

    2. The convertible top "judders" when opening/closing for about 3/4s of it's movement. This is accompanied by some sounds like metal on metal. Any tips? Can I simply grease the mechanisms with a suitable chassis grease?

    3. I'll be removing the intake silencer. Any other "free" tips to make it a more enjoyable experience? I'm very much so into cutting the weight down on this car and otherwise making it a better car without spending alot.

    4. Best source for replacement parts like spark plugs?

    5. Anyone know the going rate for a set of good condition 18" Porsche turbo wheels wrapped in either Michelin Pilot Sports or Winter tires? I'd like to downsize to a set of 17" running a set of square tires (Maybe 225/45/17?)....tips on that welcome too...

    6. The original convertible top (black) is of course fairly fogged in the rear. I'm willing to polish the hell out of it to try to clean it up. Any non-expensive chemicals for that job? I have klasse all-in-one, which seems to do a good job removing fog on most surfaces given sufficient elbow grease.

    7. Shift knob/Shift lever feels very plasticky and worn out. Recommendations?

    8. The wind-screen behind the seats rattles like crazy when the top is down. Not sure if it's the clear plastic between the seats or the black grill sections. Remove, or tighten somehow?

    That'll get me started smile.gif Any and all thoughts welcome. Once it's mine, I'll post some pictures.

    Thanks all!

    Joe

    Hi Joe,

    Congrats on a free Porsche, and a nice one at that. Every one of your questions has been addressed on this forum, and it's possible that you're not getting answers because of this. The Search function at top right leads to a wealth of information, and you should check out the 986 forum and DIY subforum for interesting topics.

    I'll bite on some of the questions you have:

    1. Use only transmission fluid recommended by Porsche. They publish a list for trans fluid, oil, tires, and a host of other maintenance items on your car. These can be found via the TSBs available for Contributing Members, or via searches of the forum. BEFORE you spend the time and money changing your fluid (which I believe is a 90k service item on your car), you should check out the bearings in your shift housing. Here's a link: http://www.renntech....ft-difficulties

    2. Top issues are covered in their own sub-forum here. You can learn how to check for wear to the servicable parts, how to adjust your top, common failures, and how to put it into "service position" so you can see what's going on. Before you use the top too many more times you should check out the results of some other noisy tops: http://www.renntech....st=0entry1024, or http://www.renntech....le-top-problem/

    3. "De-snorkeling" your car is good if you like additional noise for no good reason at all, and the risk of fouling up your air filter (however small this may be). I'll go the unpopular route and say that if you want to improve the car's handling and speed, then do something about the nut between the steering wheel and the seat first. smile.gif Porsche Club of America (PCA) hosts High-Performance Driver Education (HPDE or just DE) events that don't cost much and are tons of fun. Out on the track with your car you'll quickly realize the yawning gap between your skills and the capabilities of your "lowly" 200-hp, purpose-built sports car. My rule of thumb: If I learn to out-drive my car, then I'm allowed to modify it, or sell it and buy more car. In the meantime, if you want to lose weight, buy smaller, lighter wheels and hit the gym.

    4. The internet has a number of options for replacement parts and maintenance items, all of which are cheaper than your dealer. The popular choice (and site supporter) here is via the "Porsche Parts at Dealer Cost" link above, which will save you some coin on OEM parts. They stock maintenance items too. Wherever you shop, make sure you're buying the right part for your car by coming here and reading up first.

    5. You might have a look at 6speedonline.com's classifieds forum, a lot of folks on that board mod their cars and sell wheels and tires as take-offs. Hopefully you'll find some "comps" for what you're selling. 17" wheels are great on the Boxster, my wife has Boxster-offset MY02 996-style 10-spokes and loves the look (although she isn't the one cleaning them biggrin.gif ). The tires are cheaper, the car handles just as well and it rides better than my old 986S with 18" did.

    6. I hear good things about Plexus. My wife's vinyl top window has some light fogging at the corners and fold point, and requires a "karate chop" to avoid creasing when closed. I've used some Meg's fine cut cleaner on the fog and followed up with PlastX and the results are good, but fade over time.

    7. There are dozens of options to replace your "mushroom" shifter with something else from the Porsche parts cabinet; the later 986 models have a different shift knob that matches the 996 knob. If you want to go a little less conventional, you could get your shifter re-done in leather by someone like Paul Champagne (http://www.designpau...cheLeather.html) and spray the gate pattern top any color you like.

    8. The windstop clips that hold the lexan windblocker between the rollbar hoops are failing. See here: http://www.renntech....windstop-clips/ You can fix by replacing, or use the "poor man's method" of stuffing some 1/8" foam double-stick tape between the clip and the blocker frame. I did the latter on my wife's 99 Boxster and it's been rattle-free for a year now. Remove yours until you fix, or you may find that it removes itself at speed. wink.gif

    At your car's age, it may make sense for you to spend a few bucks getting a PPI (pre-purchase inspection, even though you already own the car) at your local mechanic. That way, you can identify and fix problems before they become expensive failures. Congrats on your "new" car, enjoy it in good health.beer.gif

    Mark

  15. 2006 997-1 Carrera, manual, US

    My two cents:

    I have X-51 headers, APR(BB) cat back exhaust, Fabspeed CAI w/BMC filter, and APR re-flash.

    The car feels and runs great.

    With regard to HP gains, APR dynoed my car after all mods were complete, I'm not sure how everyone else is determining HP, but my numbers are RWHP. Can the numbers be translated easily?

    Per APR dyno: 301 HP at rear wheels.

    Total cost: just under $3000.

    People generally say that driveline loss is somewhere between 5-15% and isn't linear. So, your gain is somewhere between negative 10 and positive 20 horsepower as compared to the 325 hp stock figure.

    Let's be optimistic and call it 10 extra ponies. You've now spent $300 per horsepower. And since faster acceleration was probably the intended result, you would have wanted more torque. What figure did their dyno give you for that? For $3k you could've bought three sets of new tires, 3 years' maintenance, two sets of brake pads and rotors installed, or half a dozen days' instructed seat time on a closed track to improve your driving skills (including gas, brake pads, lunch, and a beer at the end of each day).

    I understand the car makes a different noise now that you may like better, but neighbors and pedestrians may not. At the end of the day the noise is the only reliably measurable quantity, and its benefit is highly subjective. This is all my two cents, I still understand why people choose to buy these mods, I just don't agree with them.

    /end rant. soapbox.gif

  16. Is there a way to search for a phrase or string of words? I am looking for Steering angle sensor and I get all sorts of sensors and have to read through them all to find the one I am interested in. I have tried enclosing the word in quotes and that did not help. I am using Linux and Firefox as my browser. Any help/advice would be appreciated. I looked for a general forum to post this question and could not find one so my apologies in advance if this is the wrong forum for this post.

    A search for "steering angle" in quotes brought up a bunch of relevant posts on the first page of results. I've seen Loren suggest searches like +steering +angle, where I assume the plus prefix means AND between terms.

    Mark

  17. Hey everyone:

    Just a quick survey....I'm wondering if everyone is filling their tank with 93+ octane gas all the time as is recommended. I know that it will self adjust to a lower rating but I wanted to know if there is a significant (measurable) drop in performance, mileage, or possibly something else. I use my 2000 C4 as a (almost) daily driver and my gas mileage is absolutely terrible to start with and so I seem to be at the pump every couple days.

    Thanks

    93 here in NY. 91 RON+MON/2 (AKI) is the minimum octane listed in my owner's manual, and 87/89/93 is what's available at the pump. When I lived in CA, I did 91.

    I understand that the car will adjust to a lower octane by detecting higher instances of detonation with the engine sensors and adjusting the timing to compensate. While it might help reduce knocking that would hurt the engine, I imagine that over time it causes increased wear and tear on something. I'll take the manufacturer's word for it.

    If you want better mileage I'd suggest a lighter foot, and less weight in the car. If you get on it like I do you're gonna be visiting the pump more often. :) I'm stunned by my car, driving like I stole it will get me 19-21 MPG on the computer. My friend has an '04 C4S and his gets 17-18 MPG or so on a hot foot. Are you getting less? If so you may want to let a mechanic have a look. Simple things like oil, air filter, tire pressure, plugs, etc. can have a big effect.

    Mark

  18. Just trying to get confirmation if the latest Porsche OEM cap (996.106.447.04) is black plastic instead of blue.... Not sure when they went from 03 to 04.

    No Porsche dealers within a 2hr round trip of me, so I'm likely going to order it online.....

    I noticed a light hissing sound a couple nights ago when getting some groceries outta trunk... Going to try the cap 1st. I have the .00 version still on my '01 BoxS

    Thx,

    Peter

    I ordered one for my wife's '99 Boxster last year as a preventative measure. Not sure what the part number was, I'd have to dig out the receipt. The replacement was blue, and it was quite a few revisions removed from the old cap, which was blue too.

    This cap design has been around on VAG and Porsche products for a few decades now. The one in your picture says "West Germany" on it, so the pic itself is probably some old stock photo. If you click the "Porsche Parts at Dealer Cost" link above and give them a call, you're guaranteed to get the right cap, whatever the color.

    Mark

  19. I agree with your comment about millions spent in R&D, but on the other hand for example, BMW 330 series vs M3, they are about 100hp different by just tweaking the controls. It's all about marketing, if you have more money, you'll pay more.

    Huh? I assume your comment refers to the E46, not the E90 where the difference is two cylinders, among other things. Even on the E46 3-series, the difference is displacement. 100 HP from an NA engine doesn't come without adding cubic inches. All for a few million dollars in R&D, of course.

    wvicary is right, and while his comments ring true for many manufacturers they're especially true for Porsche. For example, the M96/M97 range of engines might be built on many similar parts, but the differences in performance are all accomplished with significant modification to displacement, internals, accessories, and the like. Even the N/A Powerkit engines rely on some serious, expensive internal and external part swaps to make all of 30 horsepower and a dollop more torque. The engine/model differences may be conceived as a marketing excercise, but their execution is wholly dependant on hours and dollars of mechanical engineering, not a "control tweak."

    An aftermarket air filter or exhaust accomplishes three things in my mind: 1) a waste of money due to no significant performance gain, 2) the risk of upsetting the delicate balance between engine systems tuned by some of the best engineering minds on the planet, and 3) on-and off-throttle noise that sounds more Tokyo than Stuttgart. Note that 3) is the only measurable benefit, which I think any aftermarket shopper should balance against cost and reliability. Hell, Porsche makes loud bits for their cars that cost a lot of money--see PSE, motorsound, etc. Porsche's items don't come with dubious claims of extra power.

    My advice? Take that money and enroll in a PCA driver education weekend. A few of those, and you'll feel a LOT faster in everything you drive. If you want noise, roll the window down or make motor sounds like the kids do when they imagine driving these wonderful cars. smile.gif

    Mark

  20. My friend bought a 997 CS4 and is looking at the new 997.2 C2S rims. He is unsure if they will fit the wide body. Will he need spacers and longer bolts, or will they simply fit.

    Are there separate rims for the CS4 that he should buy. He is new to the 911 and I have only had the narrow body so I can't help him. Any assistance would be appreciated. Thanks

    I believe the widths are the same, but the offsets are different in the rear (51 widebody, 67 narrow). Doing a few searches, it looks like the rears can be mounted but will require 17mm spacers.

    Good luck.

    Mark

  21. I have fabricated a 2-DIN leather covered dash panel for my 7" Alpine headunit. I'm now finding it somewhat dull looking since it has a large almost 1" high strip at the top.

    The thing that would look beautiful on it would be some "P O R S C H E" raised, silver, lettering.

    I found this key fob in the web: http://www.eagleday.com/poblleke.html. Does anyone know the size of the letters? If they are about 3/8" or a bit less, they would be perfect for my purpose.

    I don't know how large those letters are, but I'd guess about 1/4" high based on the secondary ring for the key. I personally think the raised-edge chrome lettering will show too much contrast in a 9x6 interior, where no straight lines or chrome bits are to be found. I'd look into embossing or stitching the leather instead. Talk to this guy, his leather work is phenomenal: http://www.designpaulchampagne.com/PorscheLeather.html

    Post pictures when you get it done!

    Mark

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