Ottawa Citizen

Buying a Porsche Boxster a dream come true

- PETER BLEAKNEY

I first drove a Porsche Boxster S in 2001. It was then that my lust affair with Porsche’s mid-engine two-seat roadster began. I had read about the Boxster’s uncanny balance, poetic moves and flat-six song, and driving turned out to be believing.

Porsche’s proposal for an “entry level” two-seat roadster, the Boxster Concept, broke cover at the 1993 Detroit auto show. Customer enthusiasm prompted Porsche to push ahead, and the production Boxster arrived for 1997 with a 2.5-litre flat-six engine making 201 horsepower. It was the first all-new Porsche model in 18 years.

The car was a critical hit and much-needed sales champ for the German sports-car maker. Its engine grew to 2.7-L and 217 hp in 2000, and that same year the hotter Boxster S broke cover, with a 3.2-L flat-six engine and 250 hp.

My decision to buy a firstgener­ation Boxster S came on suddenly, right around the time my wife didn’t throw something when I said, “I think I need to buy a Boxster.” She just kind of stared at the floor with a resigned look. That’s a green light if I’ve ever seen one.

I started scouring AutoTrader, Kijiji and Craigslist for a 2000 to 2004 Boxster S. Later, lowmileage cars were fetching north of $20,000. There are more to be found in the U.S. and prices are generally lower, which looks good until you factor in an exchange hit of about 37 per cent, plus a six per cent duty on non-NAFTA (built outside North America) vehicles.

The Porsche Boxster is generally strong and reliable, but there’s an elephant in the room when considerin­g a first-generation model (as well as the 996-generation Porsche 911) and it’s spelled IMS. Without getting too technical, the IMS (intermedia­te shaft) bearing lives within the bowels of that sweet flat-six engine, and it is supported by a bearing with a historical failure rate of about eight per cent. No biggie, you say; just get it fixed. The problem is, when said bearing fails, the engine generally grenades, turning it into your next coffee-table project. And there’s no discernibl­e warning.

So unless you want to play Boxster roulette, finding one with an IMS bearing retro-fit is a good idea. Or factor the $3,000+ job (the clutch gets done, too) into your price of entry.

I searched for a couple of months, with a few criteria: not too high mileage but not too low, because Boxsters need to be driven. Sitting for long periods exacerbate­s the IMS bearing issue. And absolutely no grey interiors. Red or yellow exterior would be cool, but not silver or grey, if possible.

Then a post showed up on AutoTrader for a white 2001 Boxster S in Vancouver, $14,500 with 126K on the clock. White is rare, and even rarer still its burgundy/ brown interior. The car appeared pristine in the pictures, and the owner had recently done a bunch of work that allegedly included the IMS bearing. Bingo.

I contacted the owner and set the wheels in motion. Vancouveri­te Andrew McCredie — fellow Driving colleague and Boxster enabler — checked it out on my behalf and suggested this wee white Porsche was worth a look.

Two days later my plane touched down in Vancouver. Visually, the white Boxster S was mint inside and out, and on the rainy test drive it felt and sounded right — quite fabulous, actually. CarFax showed only one minor bumper scrape and the owner had service records going back to 2004. But no concrete evidence of the IMS fix. Uh-oh.

Time to reassess. I had come all the way to Vancouver, the car was gorgeous and the price good. I had a teenage crush, and there was no way I was getting on a plane back to Toronto without the Boxster key in my pocket. So I handed over the bank draft and we walked over to the local ICBC Autoplan office to procure a temporary permit. I had already set up my insurance, so it was a done deal.

In the interest of journalist­ic responsibi­lity, I have to say this is not the way to buy a car. Check, double-check, bicker over the price and if you have any doubts, walk away. Problem was, I wasn’t buying a car. I was buying a Porsche.

The sun came out the next day, which I took as a sign; it had been raining in Vancouver for weeks. With my Boxster S to be dropped off at the rail transport depot later that afternoon — about $1,200 to Toronto — I lowered the top and headed up to Squamish. It was a glorious drive, following Route 99 as it wended its way along the postcard coastline.

Was it going to get any better than this?

Then the check-engine light came on. Oh yeah, I just bought a 16-year-old Porsche.

 ?? PETER BLEAKNEY/DRIVING ?? This 2001 Porsche Boxster S with 126,000 on the clock was posted on AutoTrader for $14,500.
PETER BLEAKNEY/DRIVING This 2001 Porsche Boxster S with 126,000 on the clock was posted on AutoTrader for $14,500.

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