124 | AUSTRALIAN NEW CAR&SUV BUYER’S GUIDE
T
he Porsche 718 Cayman
repeated the success of its
predecessors by scooping World
Performance Car of the Year in
2017, marking a trio of wins since
it became the hardtop companion
to the Boxster in 2005.
As before, it’s thoroughly
deserved and comes despite —
or perhaps because of — new
drivelines that change the car’s
character, with the previous
2.7-litre and 3.4-litre six-cylinder
naturally aspirated engines
replaced by turbocharged boxer
four-cylinders of 2.0-litres and
2.5-litres.
The new units share DNA with
the turbo 3.0-litre sixes now in the
911 and bring both more power
(18kW for each) and effi ciency
gains of up to 13 per cent.
The Cayman’s previous slight
power advantage over the Boxster
disappears with the 718 and
the coupe becomes the entry
model for the fi rst time, with the
220kW 2.0-litre and six-speed
manual for $114,900. No-one
who enjoys three-pedal driving
will be disappointed with this
delightful manual, although the
seven-speed dual-clutch PDK
transmission delivers quicker
acceleration and, thanks to its
better fuel economy (and hence
lower luxury car tax), becomes a
bargain option on the base car,
adding just $1860. As before,
this automatic is one of the best
around, complementing the driver
with seemingly intuitive shifts.
The 257kW 2.5 in the Cayman S
starts at $145,100 for the manual
with the auto adding $4990.
It has a more sophisticated
turbocharger, twin tailpipes,
thicker front brakes and 19-inch
alloys instead of 18s.
GTS specifi cation raises
power to 269kW and torque
to 420Nm. GTS manual is
$172,700; PDK is $178,680.
With these engines, Cayman
steps up in performance with
all bar the base 2.0-litre manual
capable of sub-5.0 second sprints
to 100km/h. The S with PDK
and the Sports Chrono optional
performance pack ($4990)
hits the ton in just 4.2 seconds
— quicker than the previous
Cayman GT4 track-focused halo
variant and as fast as a 911
costing at least $60k more.
They feel quick, too, with
forced induction moving the
torque peaks thousands of
revs lower, to just 1900rpm.
That makes Cayman relaxed
around town, with easy-going
driveability and blisteringly
responsive when you demand
everything from it. The throttle
delay typical of turbo units has
been dialled back to almost zip.
Porsche has reworked the
chassis for the 718 to minimise
pitch and roll and the result is
a car that feels rock solid on
the road and capable of intense
cornering speeds. Its damping
and composure is fi rst rate and
feeds straight into unmatched
seat-of-the-pants engagement
for the driver. Few cars are as
easy to drive fast and yet still
rewarding. It turns in sweetly
and hangs on with balance
and precision. Optional active
suspension ($2710) lowers the
car 10mm and makes it even
more effective while improving
already impressive ride quality.
As with the Boxster, a big
lift in cabin presentation as
well as better equipment
levels help its case. One slight
advantage of the Cayman is
additional luggage space inside.
Downsides include the lack of
a wiper for the rear glass and a
thrummy quality to the engine
sound when cruising. Some will
miss the creamy swirl of the
six-cylinder units, too.
The fours are different, but
as lively and vocal in their own
ways. With the 718, Cayman
reinforces its claim to being the
benchmark driver’s coupe.
By Phil King
PORSCHE CAYMAN FROM $114,900
THINGS WE LIKE
World Performance Car of the Year
2017
Accelerates as fast as a 911
Top drawer handling from balanced
chassis
Strong resale values
Much-improved cabin
THINGS YOU MIGHT NOT LIKE
No six-cylinder option available
No spare tyre
Options quickly bump the price
Thrummy engine noise when
cruising
No rear wiper
SPEX (2.5S PDK)
Made in Germany
2.5-litre horizontally-opposed four-
cylinder turbopetrol/seven-speed
dual-clutch automatic/rear-wheel
drive
257kW of power at 6500rpm/420Nm
of torque from 1900–4500rpm
0–100km/h in 4.4 seconds (claimed)
6.1 L/100km highway; 9.6L/100km
city; 98 octane premium; CO 2
emissions are 169g/km
Warranty: Three years/unlimited km
Standard: Four airbags, stability
control, 19-inch alloys, bi-xenon
headlights, power sports seats,
partial leather upholstery and trim,
parking sensors, tyre pressure
monitoring, touch control screen
with navigation, Bluetooth and
digital radio
Redbook future values: 3yr: 54%;
5yr: 38%
Safety
Not yet tested
Performance
Handling
Quality and reliability
Comfort and refi nement
Value for money
Overall
STARS
compare with ...
Audi TT RS, BMW M2