Porsche Boxster burns through canyons

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The 2013 Porche Boxster S is the third generation of this two-seater convertible, which debuted in 1996. (MCT News Service)
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Porsche has a new roadster out, the 2013 Boxster S. It’s faster, more handsome and more practical than ever before, yada yada yada, they always are. But try this on for size: You can now spend around $90,000 on one.

At that price, you might be inclined to email this article to yourself or cut it out and tuck it into a drawer for two years. By then, some of these fabulously pampered cars that have never seen a lead foot or aggressive corner will be coming off leases. And you can buy one for a much more manageable sum, and everything that’s great about the car will still ring true.

Here’s what you have to look forward to.

The 2013 Boxster S is the third generation of this two-seater convertible that debuted in 1996. Cars like the Boxster, with engines directly behind the passengers, generally have better balance and weight distribution than cars with their engines hanging over the rear axle like Porsche’s larger 911. Thus, if the two had equal power, the Boxster probably would be faster around a track.

To maintain the status quo of its sports car hierarchy, Porsche has always made sure that the Boxster had less power. With the 911 recently getting a boost, the 2013 Boxster had room to modestly increase its own output.

The base model now gets 265 horsepower and 206 pound-feet of torque from a 2.7-liter, direct-injected flat six-cylinder engine. It’s slightly smaller than the 2.9-liter engine it replaces and loses 7 pound-feet of torque. Yet revised internals yield a 10-horsepower bump.

The more powerful Boxster S that I tested has 315 horsepower and 266 pound-feet of torque. It wrings this out of a 3.4-liter engine (also a direct-injected flat-six) that’s largely similar to the older model, in both mechanics and also the gloriously distinct rasp of Porsche engines arranged in this configuration.

My tester also included the stock six-speed manual transmission, and when paired with the larger engine, it is rated at 20 miles per gallon in the city and 28 on the highway. My week with the car yielded an average of 18 mpg, a respectable figure considering that a healthy portion of that time was spent dicing the canyons of Malibu. Shedding 77 pounds through the prodigious use of aluminum helps.

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