joefig44
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Joe
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2024
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 97
- Reaction score
- 22
- Location
- Ontario, Canada
- Vehicles
- 2025 Porsche Taycan 4S, 2023 Mercedes Benz GLC300
- Thread starter
- #1
I'm getting close to pulling the trigger on my first EV. I've been test driving cars for a few months now (ICE and EVs), and almost went ahead with a new Model S LR, but I finally decided I wouldn't like it as much a year or two in as I would a Taycan.
My daily driver for 9 years now has been a 2015 Audi S4 (sport differential) and still only has 109K km on it. But it's been in two separate side collisions - both fully repaired and back to spec according to Audi. Honestly, I don't think about that fact very much, but when I do I think it may be time to finally move on.
But I also at the same time feel like it's a waste to not keep driving the S4 as it's still running so well.
I rarely put my S4 into it's Dynamic Mode, maybe just when I'm coming on or off a freeway through the turns, or a few other roads. After test driving the Teslas, I have found my S4 kind of benign even in dynamic mode - so I find now I keep it in Dynamic Mode more of the time, but find things a bit herky/jerky. In comfort mode, my Audi is just flat out boring.
I've never tracked it.
I'm targetting a Taycan 4S or GTS. My heart says GTS but my head says 4S and that I'll never use the GTS features.
Do any of you GTS owners out there find you should have gone with the 4S?
I've kept my last 2 cars about a decade each, and previous cars an avg of 5 years or so. Usually always finance - the S4 was my first lease, and I bought it out at the end as the kms were so low.
I don't have a daily commute at all, so it's <200km trips locally at most - I only drive about 12,000km a year.
Live near Toronto, Canada, so do have 3-4 months/year of mildish winter weather.
I'll likely go CPO/used from a Porsche dealership, especially since I plan to likely lease and then see where we are in 2-4 years. As mentioned, I'm always inclined to finance - leasing just doesn't feel right to me. If I did in fact decide finance because I plan to keep the car for a decade anyways, I think I'd have to go with a new 2025 4S for it's improved battery (the expense would seal the deal on a 4S vs. a new GTS I think).
It would seem silly if I planned to keep this car as long as my past cars that I buy a used one right now that doesn't have the newest battery chemistry. Or, should I just accept the new financial reality that I just lease my vehicles from now on.
I guess in another 8 years or so, the 2025 Taycan 4S would be worth very little, but by the point wouldn't the used 2024 one I bought be worth even less? I guess the difference of $30-40K CAD between the two that I paid up front would mostly be the depreciative aspect of it, but isn't that kind of worth it to get into the better battery that's available now?
OR, am I better off waiting a few more months hoping the 2025 Taycan 4S drops closer to the 2024's current price?
So anyways, as you can see, I'm still a bit conflicted on what to do on a couple fronts here in order to best set me up for the long haul.
My daily driver for 9 years now has been a 2015 Audi S4 (sport differential) and still only has 109K km on it. But it's been in two separate side collisions - both fully repaired and back to spec according to Audi. Honestly, I don't think about that fact very much, but when I do I think it may be time to finally move on.
But I also at the same time feel like it's a waste to not keep driving the S4 as it's still running so well.
I rarely put my S4 into it's Dynamic Mode, maybe just when I'm coming on or off a freeway through the turns, or a few other roads. After test driving the Teslas, I have found my S4 kind of benign even in dynamic mode - so I find now I keep it in Dynamic Mode more of the time, but find things a bit herky/jerky. In comfort mode, my Audi is just flat out boring.
I've never tracked it.
I'm targetting a Taycan 4S or GTS. My heart says GTS but my head says 4S and that I'll never use the GTS features.
Do any of you GTS owners out there find you should have gone with the 4S?
I've kept my last 2 cars about a decade each, and previous cars an avg of 5 years or so. Usually always finance - the S4 was my first lease, and I bought it out at the end as the kms were so low.
I don't have a daily commute at all, so it's <200km trips locally at most - I only drive about 12,000km a year.
Live near Toronto, Canada, so do have 3-4 months/year of mildish winter weather.
I'll likely go CPO/used from a Porsche dealership, especially since I plan to likely lease and then see where we are in 2-4 years. As mentioned, I'm always inclined to finance - leasing just doesn't feel right to me. If I did in fact decide finance because I plan to keep the car for a decade anyways, I think I'd have to go with a new 2025 4S for it's improved battery (the expense would seal the deal on a 4S vs. a new GTS I think).
It would seem silly if I planned to keep this car as long as my past cars that I buy a used one right now that doesn't have the newest battery chemistry. Or, should I just accept the new financial reality that I just lease my vehicles from now on.
I guess in another 8 years or so, the 2025 Taycan 4S would be worth very little, but by the point wouldn't the used 2024 one I bought be worth even less? I guess the difference of $30-40K CAD between the two that I paid up front would mostly be the depreciative aspect of it, but isn't that kind of worth it to get into the better battery that's available now?
OR, am I better off waiting a few more months hoping the 2025 Taycan 4S drops closer to the 2024's current price?
So anyways, as you can see, I'm still a bit conflicted on what to do on a couple fronts here in order to best set me up for the long haul.
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