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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 25th, 2023

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  • So I’ve driven the Emira on a few different occasions, and I’ve driven every flavor of Cayman plus 991 911s.

    The 911 is a step above Emira. That should be no surprise looking at the price tags, the 911 can reach $300k for certain editions.

    Emira is a Cayman competitor, but that doesn’t tell the full story either. The Emira is more powerful and visceral than your base Caymans, and probably sits in the space between a Cayman GTS 4.0 and GT4.

    The 911 will be more comfortable, more luxurious, and more reliable.

    The Emira will be more emotional, and feel more bespoke / exotic. More feedback through the steering and more mechanical bolt-action shifts.

    The 911 feels like it was fused together from a single piece of steel. The Emira feels like it was hand assembled, which it largely was.

    Very different flavors. I love the 911, but chose Emira.



  • We are in total agreement.

    I’ve been lucky enough to log thousands of miles in Elise, Exige, and ND MX-5, plus hundreds of miles of canyon in 981, 718, 4C, 991, Caterham and track time in Elise, Exige, Evora, Emira, A110, 718, 991, MX-5 and Radical and so I feel like I have a firm handle on this lightweight raw genre to the point that I tend to split hairs a bit, and that’s all that’s happening here. The S2000 is absolutely a great pure driver’s car. I agree that the rawness and austerity (plus less weight and unassisted steering) are important factors that elevate one car in this group over another but they are all in the group.




  • Pretty nice, but a first-generation product from a manufacturer who isn’t known for tightening all their screws. Take it from someone who has owned a similar drivetrain in the Wrangler twice. Both have had issues in-warranty.

    It’s a compelling vehicle, but I would budget some repairs. Can’t always count on the warranty. For example some leaky axle seals on my jeep ruined the rear brakes. Warranty covered the seals but had to spend $800 out of pocket for the brakes since warranty doesn’t cover “collateral damage”.


  • This would have to be implemented by a network as a standard way of using their network. Someone like PlugShare making reservations on a Chargepoint plug would be chaos, because not everyone has or uses that app or has any visibility to the process.

    Reservations do exist at some plugs, but they are one “one deep”. As in, you can reserve it for 10 minutes while you drive over, but someone else can’t queue a reservation behind you.