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IFYOUKNOWthenewPorsche 718
CaymanGT4,youknowthenew
Porsche 718 BoxsterSpyder.Onemay
gettopbillingasthetrack-daystar
while the other plays second fiddle
as its road-ready counterpart, but in
mechanical terms they are the same,
even down to the suspension tuning.
That’s exciting, because never in two
previous iterations has the Spyder
been engineered by Porsche’s GT
division in Weissach. This is a marriage
of style and substance the likes of
which we don’t often see at this price,
and you might even think of it as a
junior 911 Speedster.
The Cayman GT4 and Boxster
Spyder, which arrives here is early
2020, weigh the same 1420kg. That’s
some 105kg more than the old Spyder,
but is overcome by the same upsized
4.0-litre flat-six as the Cayman GT4
(tested last issue). It’s a big engine in a
small car – shorter than a Golf and only
millimetres wider – and powers the
Spyder to 100km/h in 4.4sec with the
six-speed manual. A seven-speed PDK
is at least a year away.
The Boxster Spyder is remarkably
good, even by Porsche standards. With
the roof down, there’s a different vibe
to the GT4, but it’s still 95 per cent as
capable. And the fact this engine isn’t
the equal of a supremely well-balanced
and stable chassis with masses of
lateral grip doesn’t matter so much.
This car does the basics so well you
canhavethetimeofyourlifewithout
everengagingyourrisk-assessing
frontallobe.
Steeringis lighterthanyoumight
expect and only moderately geared –
among electromechanical racks, this is
surely the current benchmark for feel
- it handles with stunning neutrality,
and the standard steel brakes are so
good (both in pedal feel and power)
that understeer can only come about
by gross negligence. So sharp is the
throttle response that you can quickly
tease the rear axle out of line – or
more than tease if you like – and you’ll
certainly have the confidence to try.
Ride is very good, even though
the Spyder sits 30mm lower than the
standard Boxster. Its two damper
modes are quite close, and on our
Scottish test route there was no need
to move out of the softer default
setting, even at great speed, so
controlled are the body movements.
The damping force is beautifully
progressive and just feeds into the
overwhelming sensation of balance,
composure and flow.
The new 309kW engine takes the
Spyder to a top speed of 300km/h, with
or without the canvas roof in place, and
for some reason appeals more here than
in the GT4. It doesn’t make the superb
racket of the previous 3.8-litre unit, but
is fabulously smooth and full and suits
the Spyder’s nature. It happily strokes
the car along at around 3000rpm, at
GT4mechanicals makeslifting thelid simply sublime
PORSCHE 718 SPYDER
BY• RICHARDLANE
ENGINE3995ccflat-six,DOHC,24v
POWER309kW@7600rpm
TORQUE420Nm@5000-6800rpm
0-100KM/H4.4sec(claimed)
5.0 WEIGHT1420kg•PRICE$209,000
Rating
LIKE:Chassisbalanceand
grip;big-enginegrunt;brawny
looks;rideandcomposure
DISLIKE:Reservedengine
sound;manualfoldingroof;
bootaccess
which point it’s still superbly responsive,
and only gets better as you stretch
it out. Second gear takes care of
everything from 60-120km/h, but the
gearshift is so good you’ll itch to slide
across the gates and into third. There’s
a very good autoblip function, though
you don’t need it.
Images don’t do the looks justice.
The arrival of GT3 hardware coincides
with an injection of visual brawn. With
a jutting front splitter, ducktail spoiler,
beefy rear diffuser, huge front air
intakes those buttresses on the rear
deck, it’s not classically beautiful but
plays the junior supercar card well.
You can’t access the rear boot unless
the manual roof is folded away, and
you have to get out to open it, but if
these are deal-breakers buy a Boxster
GTS. Whether you could subsequently
live with yourself for prioritising a small
degree of convenience over a big-
capacity engine and such a fabulous
chassis is another matter.
The 718 Spyder is such a distinctive
car both in look and feel that it could
well be most broadly desirable car
Porsche now makes. Character,
dynamism, usability and price; there’s
barely a chink in its armour. It might
not be the car you need, but it is one
you should covet deeply.
OPPOSITE
Suspension is
adjustable for toe,
camber and anti-roll
bar stiffness. New-
design 20-inch wheels
wear Michelin Pilot
Sport Cup 2 tyres
ABOVE LEFT
Deep-sided
carbonfibre bucket
seats first seen on
the 918 Spyder
BELOW
The 360mm steering
wheel is smaller than
that of a standard
Boxster
➜