Background
The Boxster is the most affordable Porsche you can buy, which is something of a double-edged sword because this familiarity has bred an awful lot of contempt, almost all of which is completely unwarranted. Indeed, many of us at The Market think the Boxster is one of THE performance bargains at the moment. With so many survivors, picking a ‘special’ one is almost impossible – except there was one special edition of the first Boxster series, the 550 Spyder 50th Anniversary Edition. And that is what we have here. Appropriately Porsche only built 1953 of them (celebrating the 50th anniversary of the launch of the iconic 550 Spyder in 1953), and we understand that only 150 were imported to the UK. Suddenly we have a rare beast on our hands…
The Boxster is a perfectly balanced, mid-engined convertible sportscar capable of providing its owner with years of tarmac-scything fun: while the base model was fitted with a 2.5-litre flat-six engine (later enlarged to 2.7-litres), the S model had the 3.2-litre engine. While both endow the lightweight car with enough performance to allow the driver to balance it on the throttle at will, there’s no denying that the bigger engine suits the car much better.
And the mid-engined configuration means that it doesn’t suffer from the sort of lift-off oversteer that plagues it bigger brother. The Boxster is a more accessible, benign car that remains steadfastly neutral at whatever (sane) speed the driver threads it through the bends at.
Interior space is good too; anyone stepping into a Boxster from a 911 of any vintage will be amazed to find such an airy cabin, even with the roof up. It is ergonomic too, and doesn’t smell of either petrol or exhaust gases. It was, and still is, a thoroughly modern car that helped broaden Porsche’s appeal to people for whom the 911 was just too, well, 911.







