Projected 2 year depreciation on 2010 Gt3?
#18
True dat!
My advisor told me that I'd make money on my new GT3.
#20
It will be worth what you are willing to let it go for as long as there is a buyer that is willing to pay that price, period. When I bought my 6GT3 I know I paid a premium price but from what was available at the time it was and still is a premium car. I have no interest in buying a newer version and if the day comes that I do decide to sell the market will be what it will be and I hope that there will still be buyers like myself.
#21
I would say 10-12k. Assume 12 so if its less you feel great. If you assume 10 and its 12 you will want to go crazy. Also look at the whole picture and say to yourself do I want the car enought that if I lose 5-10k more than I thought I would I would still be happy? If you answer yes then get the car if not maybe wait to buy one in a year or two used when they depreciate like the .1 cars.
#22
Keep in mind depreciation is only half the cost - so figure $30K per year based on my own first hand experience over 3 years:
a) $40K in depreciation and taxes
b) $10K tires, new set of tires every 5000 miles - $1500 a set
c) $5K in brakes - new rotors every 10000 miles - $1500 a set
d) $10K in insurance
3) $10K in fuel (about 11MPG was my average)
e) $5K+ in misc.
Misc. cost is off track or off road excursions/scratches/etc which are almost unavoidable. Overall worth every penny if you have the time to drive 10,000 miles a year - just for fun - otherwise it makes no sense to own a GT3 all. It will become a garage queen as most of them end up - and reason I didn't replace mine.
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BTW people like GMG can shed light on the real cost of a GT3 racing program - I am guessing is 4x this - so real bargain actually again if you have the time.
a) $40K in depreciation and taxes
b) $10K tires, new set of tires every 5000 miles - $1500 a set
c) $5K in brakes - new rotors every 10000 miles - $1500 a set
d) $10K in insurance
3) $10K in fuel (about 11MPG was my average)
e) $5K+ in misc.
Misc. cost is off track or off road excursions/scratches/etc which are almost unavoidable. Overall worth every penny if you have the time to drive 10,000 miles a year - just for fun - otherwise it makes no sense to own a GT3 all. It will become a garage queen as most of them end up - and reason I didn't replace mine.
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BTW people like GMG can shed light on the real cost of a GT3 racing program - I am guessing is 4x this - so real bargain actually again if you have the time.
Last edited by quartermile; 10-17-2009 at 12:44 PM.
#24
What's everyone's thoughts on the 997.1 GT3RS... safer bet than a non-RS car, or no different?
#25
I would think that depreciation on a high mileage RS would be far worse than non RS given that this is a track dedicated car and not significantly quicker than a regular GT3 minus the stripes and a few minor suspension mods. Certainly the standard 997.2 will be faster than any previous RS. All these cars will transform old school the minute the PDK GT3 comes out.
#26
Having said that, some GT3 owners may wish to upgrade or add an RS to his collection, while not a lot of RS owner will have that thought. You know what I mean.
#27
I would think that depreciation on a high mileage RS would be far worse than non RS given that this is a track dedicated car and not significantly quicker than a regular GT3 minus the stripes and a few minor suspension mods. Certainly the standard 997.2 will be faster than any previous RS. All these cars will transform old school the minute the PDK GT3 comes out.
What do people want from the RS? C'mon, it has much more than a "few minor suspension mods". The suspension mods alone are far from minor.
And, there will always be a market for a manual GT3; call them old school, whatever, they'll still be the weapon of choice for many.
#28
As for PDK it is likley the primary reason the new 997TT is (10 seconds) faster than the old TT at the ring. The difference between RS and GT3 is probably 2-3 seconds. When the PDK ends up in GT3 -with extra power and suspension improvements - it will likely end up as fast a Carrera GT. That would be a bargain say at $135K.
Last edited by quartermile; 10-20-2009 at 01:02 PM.
#29
I think Tim is correct that extracting the performance difference between the two is beyond most. RS is certainly more track ready but less of a daily (not that the GT3 is).
As for PDK it is likley the primary reason the new 997TT is (10 seconds) faster than the old TT at the ring. The difference between RS and GT3 is probably 2-3 seconds. When the PDK ends up in GT3 -with extra power and suspension improvements - it will likely end up as fast a Carrera GT. That would be a bargain say at $135K.
As for PDK it is likley the primary reason the new 997TT is (10 seconds) faster than the old TT at the ring. The difference between RS and GT3 is probably 2-3 seconds. When the PDK ends up in GT3 -with extra power and suspension improvements - it will likely end up as fast a Carrera GT. That would be a bargain say at $135K.
Anyway, the 991 GT3 with PDK and all may be 7-9 seconds faster than the RS, not that anyone would know it on the street. We might as well have stopped buying better Porsches long ago.
Last edited by 911dev; 10-20-2009 at 01:26 PM.
#30
PDK is not worth 10 seconds at the Nurburgring; torque vectoring, suspension improvements, 20 more horsepower, less weight and PDK are worth that.
Anyway, the 991 GT3 with PDK and all may be 7-9 seconds faster than the RS, not that anyone would know it on the street. We might as well have stopped buying better Porsches long ago.
Anyway, the 991 GT3 with PDK and all may be 7-9 seconds faster than the RS, not that anyone would know it on the street. We might as well have stopped buying better Porsches long ago.
As far as buying now or later - buy it now and enjoy it I am just using PDK as an excuse because I don't have time to drive anymore. To be honest it was easy to pass on the 997.1 (mostly cosmetic changes compare to 996.2) by 997.2 is really tempting specially in RS form- even as a garage queen.