"Get a Porsche, it's very reliable" they said.
#16
Lexus Fanatic
Wow, pretty shocking, I have been talking up a Porsche 911 to my dad for a future car but he seems to be set on a Corvette, maybe I shouldn't be pushing the 911 as much after seeing this though, he would not deal with those problems and treatment. 911's are generally supposed to be pretty reliable but I have heard of some really bad nightmare experiences and huge repair bills and now they have the fires with the new GT3 and all of them being recalled for a new engine.
#18
Pole Position
No reliability issues with either of my two 997s. The odd problem car will slip through the net even from manufacturers with otherwise excellent (and deserved) reputations for quality. With that said, this poor guy's car is clearly an absolute dog and Porsche should step up and do the right thing. It sounds like they are trying to cheap out. He should get his money back in full.
Last edited by swajames; 04-18-14 at 01:20 AM.
#19
Moderator: LFA, Clubhouse
Wow, pretty shocking, I have been talking up a Porsche 911 to my dad for a future car but he seems to be set on a Corvette, maybe I shouldn't be pushing the 911 as much after seeing this though, he would not deal with those problems and treatment. 911's are generally supposed to be pretty reliable but I have heard of some really bad nightmare experiences and huge repair bills and now they have the fires with the new GT3 and all of them being recalled for a new engine.
Overall, I think Porsche quality is still pretty good, but it's certainly taken a hit IMO with a lot of these recent problems.
#20
Pole Position
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: NSW, Australia
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No reliability issues with either of my two 997s. The odd problem car will slip through the net even from manufacturers with otherwise excellent (and deserved) reputations for quality. With that said, this poor guy's car is clearly an absolute dog and Porsche should step up and do the right thing. It sounds like they are trying to cheap out. He should get his money back in full.
The same sort of PR stupidity happened in Australia recently with VW, when there was clearly a problem with the DSG transmission, and an inordinate amount of cars were coming in with busted transmissions, and VW refused to order a recall and fix the problem, and instead forced customers to pay out of their own pocket if the car was out of warranty. It took a couple of serious accidents and an expose story in a major newspaper before the company confessed and organised a recall. VW sales had a fairly major dip and they had to offer quite severe incentives to get their sales back up for a while.
You'd think it'd be cheaper for these car companies to just fix the damn problem and help their customers, especially in the social media age where things spread/become viral so quickly.
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