What do you miss most about your B7 RS4 ?

Interesting reading. Perhaps when it is time for me to move on, I'm hoping 997 Turbs will have dropped enough.fokker wrote:Jay
Mine was a 996 with 320 bhp. The earlier 997's have 355, later Gen II 385.
The 385 direct injection engines are more rapid. The earlier ones are less revvy and more about the torque.
Gen 1 997 c4s' didn't have the famous red reflector strip at the back. Can be hard to move on simply due to this fact.
That's the major difference between a 997 and an rs4. The rs4 is very flexible with top end whereas the Porsches are more low down power. Amazing machines but after spending a week in a new and frankly amazing cayman S pdk, it made the 997 feel old.
Some major pitfalls with 996 and 997 gen 1 engines. Look out for bore scoring, get it scoped and also the infamous intermediate shaft bearing failure where average rebuilt cost is 6-7k sometimes 8-9k. Read about it on the Hartech website. Porsche reckon failure rate was 4-5% of all engines produced but it could be as high as 1 in 10.
If looking at a 911 go for gen 2 997 where they deleted the intermediate shaft bearing (IMS) or get a newish Cayman S. That or as I did have 10k in reserve if it blows or have a good aftermarket warranty.
Other option is gt3 or turbo. They suffered none of these issues due to having the Meztger engine.
Running costs are much higher though.
Dave
That's probably because it's a FWD biased haldex awd system. Basically it's FWD unless it gets into trouble, then the rears kick in.fokker wrote:Rs4 foibles fade into insignificance after the potential for a 10k 911 engine rebuild!
Rs3's seem to be great little cars but the one thing that I dislike is the wider front track and wider tyres over the rear. It just looks odd and unbalanced to me.
My choice of pocket rocket would probably be a 1M Coupe.
Users browsing this forum: dan32v, Google Adsense [Bot] and 152 guests