Should I lease or buy a Porsche?

Should I lease or buy a Porsche?

To sum it all up, leasing lets you get behind the wheel of a Porsche for less money, since you’re only financing a portion of the vehicle’s cost. When you purchase your car you’re typically signing up for higher payments over a longer period of time, but you’ll have full ownership of the Porsche once your payments end.

What is the difference between Porsche Cayenne and Cayenne S?

If you desire a sportier drive, consider getting the Cayenne S. Porsche equips it with a twin-turbocharged 2.9-liter, V6 engine. While the Cayenne can hit 60 mph in 5.9 seconds, the Cayenne S rips a 0- of 4.9 seconds. You can also expect the sports-tuned Cayenne S to offer tighter handling.

Where is the Porsche Cayenne built?

Almost 20 years since it was released, Porsche has just built its one millionth Cayenne SUV. Context? It took the company 54 years to build a million 911s. The Carmine Red GTS, which recently rolled off the production line in Bratislava, Slovakia, was ordered new by a customer in Germany.

Are Porsche Cayenne good in snow?

In the snow, with good winter tires a Cayenne is supremely competent, not because it can conquer all and it’s impervious to the conditions but because it has excellent capabilities built in and a great, communicative chassis making driving it in poor conditions easy to manage.

Why do all Porsches start with 9?

Numerous models followed within the 900 nomenclature. A very light and nimble mid-engined sports car with the 914 and the transaxle models with four- and eight-cylinder engines (924 and 928). This typical three digit number, beginning with a nine quickly became a Porsche trademark.

What does 911 mean in Porsche?

There, French car maker Peugeot objected to Porsche using any three digit number where the middle number was 0, asserting ownership of the naming rights in key markets, and having already sold many models with that scheme. So, Porsche simply replaced the middle 0 with a 1, and called the car Porsche 911.

Andrew

Andrey is a coach, sports writer and editor. He is mainly involved in weightlifting. He also edits and writes articles for the IronSet blog where he shares his experiences. Andrey knows everything from warm-up to hard workout.