2013 Porsche Boxster Reviews
You'll find all our 2013 Porsche Boxster reviews right here. 2013 Porsche Boxster prices range from $41,470 for the Boxster to $63,140 for the Boxster S.
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Porsche dating back as far as 1997.
Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Porsche Boxster, you'll find it all here.
Used Porsche Boxster and Cayman review: 1997-2015
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By Ewan Kennedy · 19 Jan 2016
Ewan Kennedy reviews the Porsche Boxster and Cayman from 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015 as a used buy.
Porsche Boxster S 2013 Review
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By Stuart Martin · 15 Apr 2013
Think of a butterfly knife and a Bowie - both are sharp but they cut in different ways.It's like that in two of the key Porsche models - the Boxster S and the brawnier 911 coupe we recently drove, the folding one is a finer and not as beefy, but both can carve through corners and put a big smile on the driver's face.The 911 is on the wrong side of $250,000 but the Boxster S is far more reasonable, starting at $133,300.VALUETwo seats, two boots, a mid-mounted flat-six and a $133,300 pricetag, which also gets sports seats, a touchscreen satnav and USB/Bluetooth-equipped sound system, dual zone climate control, a fully-automatic electric roof that can be erected in less than 10 seconds at speeds up to 50km/h, wind-blockers, power windows and mirrors, sports steering wheel sans any control buttons.The instrument panel has the tacho in the middle, with digital speed readout, speedo to the left and a digital screen for a number of driver in readouts (a la 911) with several display options including satnav instruction.The test car's pricetag had risen to $144,000 with the fitting of amusingly named PASM - Porsche Active Suspension Management - for $3390, 20in Carrera S wheels priced at $3390, $1850 "worth" of metallic paint, electric sports seats for $890, folding mirrors for $690 and the sports steering wheel for $490.TECHNOLOGYHere's where life gets interesting in the new Boxster S - a 3.4-litre flat "Boxer" aluminium six-cylinder, water-cooled with four overhead camshafts and four valves per cylinder.The engine has an intake system that's been optimised for induction noise, as well as using direct injection and variable valve lift and timing on the inlet side.For those looking for a little more frugality in their fun, there's a quick and smooth automatic stop-start fuel saver function, although that can be disabled by its own button or by deploying the Sport mode; it also charges the electrical system with brake energy recovery.The result - 232kW of power at 6700rpm, with peak torque of 360Nm between 4500rpm and 5800rpm.That's not being asked to haul a lot of lard either - the soft-topped roadster weighs 1320kg and uses aluminium (doors and bootlids) and steel in the body.The vehicle is 35kg lighter than its predecessor and the model line-up has not increased greatly in weight since its introduction in 1999, when it proffered up 185kW and 305Nm within a 1295kg package.DESIGNThe Porsche design crew maintain evolution over revolution for its motto, so there's no doubt what you're looking at is a Porsche.Measuring just 32mm longer overall, the wheelbase is up 60mm (noticeable for taller drivers getting settled in the cabin), track has increased front and rear for a squatter, more aggressive look, it's 13mm lower in overall height with a lower rake to the windscreen.The Boxster has new-look bi-xenon headlights, wider air intakes and an LED tail-light section that has the rear automatic spoiler integrated within.The roof is its own tonneau now and while the twin-pipe exhaust to differentiate the S have been retained, they're nestled into a proper rear diffuser.The cargo space front and rear measures 280 litres all up - 150 litres in the snout and 130 litres above the engine.SAFETYDon't expect ANCAP to slam one of these into a pole for a crash test rating anytime soon, but the Boxster S has no shortage of safety gear - stability and traction control, anti-lock brakes, dual front and side airbags and whopper stoppers - grabbed by four-piston aluminium calipers front and rear, the front wheels cover 330mm drilled and ventilated discs, the rears are slightly smaller at 299mm.DRIVINGThe Boxster S has grown despite the shadow of its longer-running sibling but this is a vehicle that deserves its own spotlight. The snug cabin is better accommodates taller occupants now and that's thanks to a little more wheelbase. The car-shaped key sparks the flat-six behind your left hip-joint into life and it snorts and snuffles into life.Hit the Sport button and its woofle gets more pronounced as you blip the right-hand pedal.The test car is a six-speed manual - something of a rarity not just in Porsches but across the board - but snicking the short-throw lever into first and idling quietly away, the clutch and shift action quickly becomes fun again.As does the soundtrack - induction noise, metallic yowl, smile, change gears, do it all again. It's not as brutal as the 911 in terms of acceleration - that would never do - but it sings nonetheless.A series of bends delivers the Boxster's coup de grace - balance. The poise of the mid-engined chassis is kart-like - you point with the steering wheel, which has no other control system apart from directing the front wheels - and it turns.So connected is the front end to the steering wheel it is almost almost surgical, no fears about electric power steering here, the Porsche system nails it. It can play a little under brakes and again with the rear axle on corner exit, but largely it just scythes through a bend and onto the next one. Beautifully.The test car had the optional adaptive suspension but only on a perfectly-surfaced road or a racetrack would you really need it. It's control and bump absorption in normal mode is talented enough for any public road.Around five seconds (the PDK is a smidgin quicker) to 100km/h and its brakes would bring it to a halt in short order too - US testing showed it would stop from that speed in about 31 metres, around six metres sooner than your average small family sedan.Fuel use isn't outrageous either - the ADR highway-biased claim is 8.8 litres per 100km, but the trip computer was saying 12.4l/100km (at an average 44km/h) after our week in the little German beauty, no mean feat given some of the pro-active driving undertaken.The Boxster experience is honest and epic, orchestral and sublime - a car you could (and would want to) drive every day.PORSCHE BOXSTER S MANUALPrice: from $133,300Warranty: 3 years/unlimited kmResale: 61 per cent (Source: Glass's Guide)Service interval: 20,000km/12 monthsSafety rating: not testedSpare: mobility kitEngine: 3.4-litre direct-injection variable-valve flat six cylinder, 232kW/360NmTransmission: 6-speed manual; RWDBody: 4.4m (L); 1.8m (w); 1.3m (h)Weight: 1320kgThirst: 8.8 1/100km, on test 12.4; tank 64 litres; 206g/km CO2
Porsche Boxster 2013 review
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By Chris Riley · 07 Feb 2013
Sometimes it's more about what is going on outside than inside the car. For example it seems everyone loves a Porsche and they're not backward in coming forward.Take the middle-aged European man trying desperately to attract my attention on the way back from picking up our bright red Porsche Boxster. Finally, reluctantly, I acknowledged his presence and wound down the window to find out what he wanted."Beautiful car," he said. "I dream of one day owning a car like that one. "How much is it worth?" Duh. "I don't know," I had to admit. "It's not mine, it belongs to a friend (a white lie but it saves long explanations).Tick, tick, tick..."About $140,000!" I guessed (I thought it was in the S. I hadn't checked). "It's a beauty," he confirmed once more before the lights went green and we parted.VALUELater, I was surprised to find the Boxster was in fact $20,000 less than I had anticipated, even with a swag of accessories fitted. Priced from $107,000 the two-seat sportster is arguably the most desirable of the Porsches, a fun drop top that sits on rock solid engineering idiot proof almost.The price of our test car was almost $120,000, by the time you added the matching red seatbelts and a set of fearsome, black 20 inch rims. The belts are $600 alone while the 20 inch Carrera rims finished in black bump the figure up another 10 grand a lot but they look hot.Even at this price, it's still well short the $133K Boxster S. If price is no object, you'd be silly not to pick the more powerful S let's face it. But remember those wheels are still going to be another 10 grand on top of that again.For my mind, the smart money is on the standard model with the big wheels and maybe a Bose sound system thrown in another $1500. At the end of the day, it's still $15,000 less than the S and you'll be grinning from ear to ear, because either way the Boxster is not going to disappoint.TECHNOLOGYThe big difference between the two models is in the size of the engines. The Boxster is powered by a 2.7-litre 195kW six while the S gets a larger, 3.4-litre version that develops 232kW. It's quicker off the line, but uses more premium at the same time. Both engines are naturally aspirated. Our car was fitted with a six-speed manual or the option of the 7-speed PDK auto.DRIVINGYou can cruise the beaches with the top down or cut loose on some challenging mountain switchbacks, either way the Boxster is happy to oblige. Back at the office word spread quickly that we had a Porsche in the carpark. The girls all gushed and the guys became silent and envious, but they all wanted a ride.Closer to home my mate Johnno who lives down the road was just as quick off the mark, wanting to know if he could get a test drive. Not likely I drove. "What's so special about these cars?" he wanted to know. "What does a Porsche have that other cars don't?" "Where do I begin my friend?" I replied.Last but not least in our sudden fan club was the bogan in the Falcon, who tracked us as we tried to slip quietly down the motorway. Ogling both the car and my wife he mouthed the words "noice, noice" through the window. "Looks like you've got an admirer," I said. "Hardly. It's the car he's interested in." Thanks all for the vote of confidence.VERDICTIt looks fantastic, goes hard, makes all the right noises and simply refuses to become unsettled no matter how hard you push and how bad the bitumen is under wheel. What's not to like?