BMW E39 M5

BMW set the golden standard for the sport sedan with the release of the E39 body style M5 for the 2000 model year.  Even almost two decades later, it delivers a sporty, luxurious, visceral driving experience unmatched by most modern cars.

What made the E39 M5 so special?

It was only offered with a 6-speed manual transmission.  Every single E39 M5 every built has three pedals.  So if you see someone driving one, you know he or she is the real deal!  The lack of any automatic option kept away the wannabe enthusiast crowd.

The 400hp S62 V8 debuted with this car.  It has 5 liters of displacement, which was and still is enormous for a DOHC European car.  Double-VANOS (BMW's variable valve timing) adjusted exhaust and intake cams for more power and fuel efficiency, and as an added bonus were notoriously expensive to repair.  It has eight individual throttle bodies underneath its gloriously weird intake plenum.  The S62 remains known for being maintainable only by professional mechanics and OCD engineers, insanely punchy on the throttle response, and sounding like a cyborg T-rex's mating call on full throttle. 

This car speaks to me because it looks like it could be driven only by dentists, yet has gobs of torque and handles like it's on rails.  Especially after it has aged so many years, no one really recognizes it except true car nerds.  You get the occasional gas station conversation from fellow enthusiasts but no regular members of the public hassle you.  Mustangs and imports with huge wings don't try to race you on the street, but if they did they would be embarrassed by how quickly it gets to the office.

My particular car has Ground Control coilovers, a square wheel setup with 9.5" widths all around, muffler delete, magnaflow sport cats, a CSF aluminum radiator, ESS Tuning / Vortech supercharger kit, Snow Performance water mist system, and a tune from Matt at HD Tuning. 

 2021 Update: The supercharger is still working well, and I’ve done a few mods to help it work even better. One is replacing the ESS intake (which includes a flexible intake hose that collapses under throttle) with a hard carbon fiber elbow and a short section of silicone . This new intake may or may not stay cooler, but it certainly doesn’t collapse under throttle. I also added a splash-resistant pre-filter sock for protection against wet Florida driving conditions. Eventually I will increase the intake filter size but I need to completely delete the fog lights first. I’ve made one other pretty cool mod which is a Mighty Mouse atmospheric vent catch can mounted with a custom mount I designed. On the supercharger’s bypass valve, you can either recirculate the excess boost back to the inlet side of the supercharger (which creates immense intake air temperatures), or you can vent it directly to atmosphere inside the engine bay. I was doing the latter and it was soaking the engine bay in oil. This is the reason I bypass the stock Air/Oil separator system with the catch can. Now I can still vent the bypass valve to atmosphere, but it is dry air with no oil vapor. Oil vapor from the valve covers now relieves directly to atmosphere via the catch can and its vent. This can make for some bad smells after startup, but nothing too bad.

2004 Porsche 911 40th Anniversary Edition

2009 was an interesting time for the 911.  I was searching for a fun autocross car, and had been mostly shopping cars in the $10k range like E36 M3s and Mazda RX8s.  A marketing anomaly known as Rich-People-Must-Have-the-Newest-911 meant that the outgoing 996 body style, made from 1999-2005, was now as valuable as a well-optioned Camry.  The 997 was in, and gosh-darn-it it had those proper round headlights like the 993.  And in 2009, that was apparently all anyone cared about.

Some poor bastard bought my 911 in 2004 for $98,000.  It was a very special 911- not quite a GT3 but close.  It was a 40th Anniversary Edition.  Limited to only 1963 units (the year the 911 was first released), each "40 Jahre" car had a plaque on the console letting you know which number it was.  I say poor because I'm sure he did not enjoy the X51 package (standard engine upgrade on the 40th, but a $17k option on regular 996s), the Limited Slip Differential (available only on the 40th and on some 1999 models with the smaller 3.4L engine), nor the club sport suspension as much as I have.  I know this because he traded it in, along with its very sought-after matching luggage set, to a Mercedes dealer who sold it to me for a song.  I still haven't forgiven those Mercedes bastards for swiping the luggage set.  The car was low miles, mint condition, and besides breaking a pressure plate, it's needed only preventative maintenance.

I've upgraded it with Koni yellows and a GMG world challenge swaybar.  I also deleted the mufflers to save weight and to upset the sound people at national autocross events, because it comes within tenths of a decibel of the sound limit.

This is not a car that you get in and drive; this is a car that you strap into and wear like a damned jetpack.  No other car has ever felt so liberating as this one does.

Summer 2021 Update: I’ve owned this car for 11+ years now and it has been very reliable. It’s over 100k miles now, and has received some mods like a DAS sport roll bar and h&r lowering springs and GT3 lower control arms. The market has suddenly gotten VERY enthusiastic on 996 values, and I could probably sell the car for what I bought it for back in 2009. The 40Jahre name carries a lot of value these days as 996GT3’s now go for nearly New GT3 prices, and the 40AE is the next best thing. The bloating in size of the newer 991 and 992 models has made people appreciate the relatively small size of the nimble 996.

2004 Porsche Cayenne Turbo "Sea Beef"

Ah yes, the Jeep-conquering legend.  I acquired this 2004 Cayenne turbo with 121k miles in driving shape, but in need of "a little TLC."  It turns out that was quite the undertaking. 

When the Cayenne was first released I, like many gearheads, despised the thought of Porsche building an SUV.  I gave it a chance and I've owned two of them now.  Never mind that its stellar sales saved the company, the Cayenne was something I didn't know was possible: it was the daily driver/tow vehicle that wasn't miserable to drive. 

I grew up in a household of suburbans; which are comfortable, can be driven on the beach, tow well, and can comfortably seat a football team.  They are, however, abysmal to drive.   Brake pedal pressure changed the angle of the nose but not the rate at which you stopped.  4th gear was too tall for towing up any grade, but 3rd was too short for cruising.  Parking required a team of spotters.  The slightest turn resulted in a rollover.

The Cayenne was a welcome relief from that.  It towed better than the Suburban it replaced, thanks to standard air suspension, a 6-speed transmission with manually-selectable gears, huge Brembo brakes, and let's not forget two metric ass-tons of twin-turbo horsepower (450 to be exact).

Instantly, I was won over.  No one seemed to pay it much mind on the street, but it was nearly as fast as my 911, which is to say insanely fast for an SUV.  It would beat most cars off the line while towing my boat.  Magazines tested it at 5.0 seconds 0-60 with a 165mph top speed.  On top of that, you could actually turn.  Sure, it didn't handle like it was on rails like my 911, but the whole braking, turn-in, apex, accelerate experience is all there with perfect feedback.

It did require a lot of work due to neglected maintenance.  It needed a rebuilt driveshaft, engine mounts (which required removal of the engine from the car), cooling system overhaul, every electrical gremlin you can imagine, the front suspension, and pretty much all of the vacuum lines.  But that was really it.  It never needed a new turbo or wheel bearings or a transmission. 

And one day it occurred to me that it might be alright off-road with the proper tires, given the air suspension lift and the intelligent AWD system.  The local Jeep club found it entertaining, as did over a million youtubers to date.  Then we tried (and succeeded) to run it at the racetrack and on some trails on the same day, with only a change of tires. 

This is a car that does everything.  I'm sad that it is now for sale, but glad to make room for a newer, lighter, faster version with more buttons.  So. Many. Buttons.

 2021 Update: This car sold to a local friend who continues to use it as intended, towing project cars and daily driving. Looking back on this car, it was always a bit of a project but it was probably the most fun I’ve ever had with any vehicle. At the time, no one was thinking about really using these cars for fun stuff because they were still seen as Rich Mom cars, but now that they’ve depreciated drastically, that’s changed. They are much cheaper to buy than other 4WD vehicles like 4 Runners, Jeeps, etc, albeit tougher to keep going. There are certainly parts that have not aged well, like the driveshafts and headliners (or worse, the panoramic roof), but in all these cars are turning out to be cool baselines for projects. Companies like Eurowise are doing overland builds. I’m not sure I would buy another one now that I’m spoiled by the 2011+ interior, but I’m glad I bought this car.