The 981 Boxster/Cayman S performs very similarly to the base 991 Carrera. You're talking hundreds of pounds less and a 30-35 HP deficit. Depending on the track and the configurations of each vehicle, you might even run a faster time in the 981.
Now that said, the base 991 is the bottom end 911 model. You can option a 981 up into the 90k range pretty easily if you check a lot of boxes, the 991 starts around 85-90 as I recall, and in reality is almost always configured at $100k+.
The 991s also reach up into the stratosphere if you with with an S, gt3, turbo, carrera 4, or any of the 20 other models they have nowadays.
My point is, for equal money, the cars are actually pretty close in raw performance. It's just that the 981 tops out quickly and all of the upside is with the 991.
Second comment: the comment about tires in a Porsche being expensive to replace is absurd.
If you put equivalent tires on an American car, they would cost the same. You're getting exactly what you pay for. If you wanted to put Chinese tires on your 911 GT3, do it. Likewise, no one is stopping you from putting pilot sport cups on your Kia.
I will also note that *part* of the reason oil changes are $250 on a typical Porsche is because the car is engineered to race reliably. In order to do that, they have oil capacity of around 10 quarts. You're comparing apples to oranges with most American/Japanese and most German cars that have a 5 QT capacity.
I used to own a Lexus with 10 QT capacity and guess what...$200+ oil changes at the dealer.
Of course they rape you on the price, but there IS a volume difference that partially explains the difference.
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