EOTR Cayman GT4
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VW Golf Clubsport S
EOTR Cayman GT4
Somewhat unexpectedly I’ve found myself in the headspace where it’s time to move on from my GT4. More on why later
Need to know: Bought the car with 1500 miles, now has 25,200 miles.
I’m going to outline the money side of things first.
I bought the car in October 2018 “for £85,000”. It was the first time I’ve used any finance on a car.
Late 2018 was undoubtedly close to the top of the market for GT4s, I could see this myself but I was feeling fairly flush at that time and saw the opportunity to catch the end of season at the nurburgring, so I took the plunge and went for the GT4. After getting zero interest privately for my high mileage E92 M3 at £14k I was able to trade it for this full amount against the GT4, which felt like a real escape from how undesirable thirsty, high mileage performance cars had become. I’d managed to save up a further £14k over the previous few months so my deposit totalled £28k. The remaining £57k was to be financed.
I was offered a hire purchase deal over 4 years which came to about £2k/month or a PCP which would be a monthly £701. Since my income can be relatively volatile and I’ve never had a significant ‘direct debit’ before (no mortgage, very fortunate inheritance) the PCP looked far more manageable and I could worry about saving for the ballon at a later date.
So after 26 months I’ve paid £28k deposit and £18,226 in monthlies and my settlement figure is £50,500. I’ll be paying the settlement figure next week which means I’ve spent £96,726 on a car which is now worth £65k. Put simply £20k of this is depreciation over 2 and a bit years and 24k miles and £11,700 is interest on the £57k borrowed.
Full disclosure - I have a house removals company and the last 3 months has seen an extraordinary boom in this sector which is how I’ve managed to save the £50.5k needed to settle the finance.
So about the actual car....
It’s nowhere near as good a road car as people say. I’m going to judge it against my other car, a Golf Clubsport S. The golf is so much better as a fast road car in so many areas I would consider crucial.
1. Visibility. Whilst probably not bad for a mid engined car, the GT4 is embarrassed relative to the golf in terms of being able to foresee and plan wheel and car positioning on a challenging A or B road.
2. Ride/wheel articulation. Both the golf and GT4 undoubtedly have exceptionally well tuned dampers, but the golf has so much more travel to work with, which gives it more flexibility and feedback and often pace across country too
3. Bloody cost! There’s no anxiety to tossing a hot hatch over and through a British back road but the anxiety doing the same in an expensive sports car can be prohibitively intrusive
4. Control weights. The GT4 has a stupidly heavy clutch, baffling heavy steering and a needlessly ‘chunky’ gear shift action. In the golf you never think about any of these which is testament to how well judged they are for concentrating on flinging it down a challenging back road.
.......And I can forgive all of the above because of my ongoing affair with the nurburgring. Make no mistake, the GT4 is near perfect for an intermediate circuit enthusiast like myself. Over the last 2 ‘seasons’ I’ve done around 250 laps of the nurburgring in the GT4 (around 3k of it’s 25k miles) and it’s been absolutely sensational. The grip, balance, feedback, speed, adjustability, durability and sense of occasion all contribute to make it a petrolhead fantasy. None of the road shortfalls apply and the car is your best friend from start to finish of the day.
About the best way I can summarise is the 8 or 9 times on the nordschleife I’ve found myself in a suddenly unpredictable swerve/4 wheel drift/misjudged entry speed situations and each time the car has behaved near miraculously, way beyond my capabilities as a driver and guided me out of trouble. I’m fairly sure a GT3 wouldn’t have been as accommodating.
So now the question is what to replace it with? AMG GTRs look like fantastic value at £90-£95k although it’s not really my sort of car - too big, heavy and lacking finesse in an ideal world. So I’m doing the numbers on a 600LT. It looks affordable with a full £65k deposit (sale price of the GT4) but may end up being a bit stressful to use/enjoy as it’s a big step up in terms of track maintenance and depreciation.
Any suggestions welcome!
“Crazy” Pete
Need to know: Bought the car with 1500 miles, now has 25,200 miles.
I’m going to outline the money side of things first.
I bought the car in October 2018 “for £85,000”. It was the first time I’ve used any finance on a car.
Late 2018 was undoubtedly close to the top of the market for GT4s, I could see this myself but I was feeling fairly flush at that time and saw the opportunity to catch the end of season at the nurburgring, so I took the plunge and went for the GT4. After getting zero interest privately for my high mileage E92 M3 at £14k I was able to trade it for this full amount against the GT4, which felt like a real escape from how undesirable thirsty, high mileage performance cars had become. I’d managed to save up a further £14k over the previous few months so my deposit totalled £28k. The remaining £57k was to be financed.
I was offered a hire purchase deal over 4 years which came to about £2k/month or a PCP which would be a monthly £701. Since my income can be relatively volatile and I’ve never had a significant ‘direct debit’ before (no mortgage, very fortunate inheritance) the PCP looked far more manageable and I could worry about saving for the ballon at a later date.
So after 26 months I’ve paid £28k deposit and £18,226 in monthlies and my settlement figure is £50,500. I’ll be paying the settlement figure next week which means I’ve spent £96,726 on a car which is now worth £65k. Put simply £20k of this is depreciation over 2 and a bit years and 24k miles and £11,700 is interest on the £57k borrowed.
Full disclosure - I have a house removals company and the last 3 months has seen an extraordinary boom in this sector which is how I’ve managed to save the £50.5k needed to settle the finance.
So about the actual car....
It’s nowhere near as good a road car as people say. I’m going to judge it against my other car, a Golf Clubsport S. The golf is so much better as a fast road car in so many areas I would consider crucial.
1. Visibility. Whilst probably not bad for a mid engined car, the GT4 is embarrassed relative to the golf in terms of being able to foresee and plan wheel and car positioning on a challenging A or B road.
2. Ride/wheel articulation. Both the golf and GT4 undoubtedly have exceptionally well tuned dampers, but the golf has so much more travel to work with, which gives it more flexibility and feedback and often pace across country too
3. Bloody cost! There’s no anxiety to tossing a hot hatch over and through a British back road but the anxiety doing the same in an expensive sports car can be prohibitively intrusive
4. Control weights. The GT4 has a stupidly heavy clutch, baffling heavy steering and a needlessly ‘chunky’ gear shift action. In the golf you never think about any of these which is testament to how well judged they are for concentrating on flinging it down a challenging back road.
.......And I can forgive all of the above because of my ongoing affair with the nurburgring. Make no mistake, the GT4 is near perfect for an intermediate circuit enthusiast like myself. Over the last 2 ‘seasons’ I’ve done around 250 laps of the nurburgring in the GT4 (around 3k of it’s 25k miles) and it’s been absolutely sensational. The grip, balance, feedback, speed, adjustability, durability and sense of occasion all contribute to make it a petrolhead fantasy. None of the road shortfalls apply and the car is your best friend from start to finish of the day.
About the best way I can summarise is the 8 or 9 times on the nordschleife I’ve found myself in a suddenly unpredictable swerve/4 wheel drift/misjudged entry speed situations and each time the car has behaved near miraculously, way beyond my capabilities as a driver and guided me out of trouble. I’m fairly sure a GT3 wouldn’t have been as accommodating.
So now the question is what to replace it with? AMG GTRs look like fantastic value at £90-£95k although it’s not really my sort of car - too big, heavy and lacking finesse in an ideal world. So I’m doing the numbers on a 600LT. It looks affordable with a full £65k deposit (sale price of the GT4) but may end up being a bit stressful to use/enjoy as it’s a big step up in terms of track maintenance and depreciation.
Any suggestions welcome!
“Crazy” Pete
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
A 600LT sounds like a tremendous idea. 

- Rich B
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
£15k a year for a GT4 isn't A huge number though I suppose!
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Nice open review
And when you pick up that 600LT... there is ANOTHER bacon roll waiting for you here.

And when you pick up that 600LT... there is ANOTHER bacon roll waiting for you here.

Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
I mean, the deprecation I get, sounds about right given the car, but £12k on £57k over 2 years?? I thought Wonga had gone out of business?
(OV9, the thrill of leasing and interest charges)
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Appreciate you being open about the money side as it's not often talked about for fear of being called bonkers. Which you clearly are, you even have the nickname to prove it
A guy a few doors down from me has just swapped his C63S Coupe for a brand new 718 GT4. Not quite as jealous now

A guy a few doors down from me has just swapped his C63S Coupe for a brand new 718 GT4. Not quite as jealous now

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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
There’s also tyres, brakes, insurance, fuel, road tax, servicing and ‘ring lap tickets. Estimate £20-£25k this season
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
I have never known Pete as Crazy Pete.
He’s always been Mad Pete to me.
He’s always been Mad Pete to me.
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
I took Porsche finance as it was uncharted territory for me. The interest rate was shite (8 or so % i think) but I felt in safe hands. That’s good, seductive branding and it worked.
- Rich B
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Yep, I understood that that was just for the car.
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Sorry my mistake, I was “crazy pete” during my time in Barlinnie*mik wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:19 pm I have never known Pete as Crazy Pete.
He’s always been Mad Pete to me.
*strathclyde university student accommodation
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Oof, as an actual normal person, I imagine that has to weigh on your mind a bit. That said, I work in telecoms arbitrage so I can't bloody talk.revsRus wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 8:35 pm Full disclosure - I have a house removals company and the last 3 months has seen an extraordinary boom in this sector which is how I’ve managed to save the £50.5k needed to settle the finance.
With respect to something bigger and heavier, all I can say is that I bloody miss the delicacy and 'on tiptoes' feel of the Puma, even though the 330ci has knocking on twice the power. I miss it every time I drive it.
Every time.
If you have the budget and the 'space' in terms of seating requirements etc, then perhaps something more Lotusy might be an idea....?
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
I guess the first owner bought for £65k ish, drove 1500 miles and sold for £80k (assume £5k mark up Porsche stealership) netting him £15k profit for his year of ownership. Although I reckon I had more fun
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Not sure what you mean? Am I the normal person here?Beany wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:29 pmOof, as an actual normal person, I imagine that has to weigh on your mind a bit.revsRus wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 8:35 pm Full disclosure - I have a house removals company and the last 3 months has seen an extraordinary boom in this sector which is how I’ve managed to save the £50.5k needed to settle the finance.
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Massive economic crash, people moving out of houses they can't afford etc?revsRus wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:32 pmNot sure what you mean? Am I the normal person here?Beany wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:29 pmOof, as an actual normal person, I imagine that has to weigh on your mind a bit.revsRus wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 8:35 pm Full disclosure - I have a house removals company and the last 3 months has seen an extraordinary boom in this sector which is how I’ve managed to save the £50.5k needed to settle the finance.
Or, given your experience, am I wrong, and people are just shuffling sideways?
I'd gladly be wrong!
- Rich B
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Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Huge pause and pent up market followed by Stamp duty break leading to massive demand.
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
If you could have bought it without paying the premium over new list, the running costs would be far more palatable.
Finance isn’t a bad thing of itself, but go elsewhere next time and find a proper interest rate, and buy the car at the right price. I reckon a McLaren will harm you on depreciation but nobody’s ever going to say, “You paid £85k for a Boxster?!”
Finance isn’t a bad thing of itself, but go elsewhere next time and find a proper interest rate, and buy the car at the right price. I reckon a McLaren will harm you on depreciation but nobody’s ever going to say, “You paid £85k for a Boxster?!”
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VW Golf Clubsport S
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
Precisely! Quite a few separations too.Rich B wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:43 pm Huge pause and pent up market followed by Stamp duty break leading to massive demand.
Demand could well die a death in March after the stamp duty break ends
Re: EOTR Cayman GT4
That's also not unreasonable - as it's not in my financial headspace, I'll hapilly eat crow and be called a twat on that.Rich B wrote: Fri Dec 04, 2020 9:43 pm Huge pause and pent up market followed by Stamp duty break leading to massive demand.
I still think @revsRus is looking for something more delicate than he currently has though, handling wise.