Kimithechamp
Kimithechamp
Kimithechamp

I recently had the pleasure of driving a brand new boxster base model with PDK. It was a rental at Hertz/Enterprise and I put about 70 miles on it.

Sure give it an electric option, but keep the gas powered one.  Let the market decided if it should survive.

First they came for our clutch pedals, and we did nothing.

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But are we pondering what they’re pondering?

It wouldn’t be the “Boxster” then. The name is a combination of “boxer” (engine) and “roadster”; without a boxer engine, they would be completely ignoring why the car is named what it is in the first place.

Never go full electric.’

Judging by the amount of fun that guy in the lead pic has on his face, I say no thank you.

This seems like a no-brainer: go electric. Initial Boxster buyers weren’t die-hard purists, and that’s exactly the demographic you want throwing money at EV development.

718 sales are already down, which is hugely uncharacteristic of a new sports car. The 4-cylinder is 100% to blame.

The strike pay increase is an escalation, one of the first of which we will probably be seeing much more of.

I can see both sides but a budget cap is not for F1. Add to this, the small fact that we don’t have any more independent in-season testing, which has hurt Ferrari more than other teams. I’m certain Red Bull would love some track days as well.

Basically, Red Bull team owner Dietrich Mateschitz and boss Christian Horner have both expressed their belief that requiring teams to compete at the same level wouldn’t be fair because it means they won’t have the ability to spend millions of dollars more than their competition in order to assume their performance

Looks like Redbull is taking a page out of Ferraris playbook.

That single image alone gives me new feelings in places I didn’t think could have them. Absolutely gorgeous. I want to see that car sans livery with metallic paint on it.

<insert take my money gif here>

hell yeah, maximum parsh forever

I feel similarly. I’ve only watched one episode of ‘Adam Ruins Everything’ and it was on “Cars”. The basic thesis was that everyone should live in densely-packed urban areas. Oh, and they have to be warm year-round because we are going to walk everywhere.

If Americans didn’t buy massive vehicles that drastically reduce the capacity of roads, maybe it wouldn’t have come to this.

But it did.

Good thing you live in the boonies. Stay there.

Porsche isn’t located right in Stuttgart’s city center, so you’re probably fine. They even have several blocked-off streets in downtown Stuttgart that make it safe, pleasant and easy to roam as a pedestrian, oh the HORROR! That horror was actually pretty nice, TBH.

It woud rid them of New Yorkers?