The 2004 Porsche 911 GT3 is a Rear-wheel drive Coupe. It can accommodate up to 4 passengers. It has 2 Doors and is powered by a 3.6L H6 DOHC 24 valves engine which outputs 380 hp @
7400 rpm and is paired with 6 speed manual transmission gearbox. The 2004 Porsche 911 GT3 has cargo capacity of 100 Liters and the vehicle weighs 1380 kg. In terms of ride assists, the 2004 Porsche 911 GT3 has stability control and traction control in addition to anti-lock brake system (ABS). The vehicle has an optional engine as well It offers and. Safety features also include None and None. The front suspension is while the rear suspension is. The car also features a It has as standard. Electronic features include Cruise Control. For convenience, the car has Power windows and Power door locks. There is also a remote keyless entry feature. Moreover, the car has. The steering wheel has audio control buttons. In terms of performance, the car has 415 N.m of torque and a top speed of 266 km/h. The 2004 Porsche 911 GT3 accelerates from zero to 60 mph in 4.9 seconds and hits quarter mile at 12.8 seconds. Fuel consumption is 16.5 L/100km in the city and 8.1 L/100km in the highway. The car price starts at $ 139,000
Estimates based on a driving average of 12,000 miles per year
Used Condition
Trade In Price
Private Party Price
Dealer Retail Price
Outstanding
$ 26,977
$ 34,552
$ 39,014
Clean
$ 24,267
$ 31,143
$ 35,102
Average
$ 18,847
$ 24,326
$ 27,278
Rough
$ 13,426
$ 17,509
$ 19,453
Still the quintessential sports car after four decades, the 2004 Porsche 911 has a unique blend of style, performance and sound that's unmatched by anything on the road.
Who hasn't heard of Porsche? In 2006 it won the most prestigious automobile brand for over 70 years of excellence and dedication to the four-wheel god. Established at first as a consulting and development company by Dr. Ing. Ferdinand Porsche in 1931, Porsche SE has since become synonymous with luxurious sports cars as well as cutting edge technology.
Situated in downtown Stuttgart, Porsche's first contract of developing a people's car, a Volkswagen, appointed by the German government. The result was one of the most famous cars in history, one of the best sold and one of the most easily recognizable out there, the Beetle. Many features of the Beetle would find their place on the first ever Porsche, the 64, developed in 1939.
During WWII the Porsche factory turned to making vehicles for the German Army, such as the Kubelwagen and the Schwimmwagen as well as contributing to the production of Tiger and Elefant tanks. After the war Ferdinand was imprisoned for war crimes for 20 months and was during that time that his son, Ferry Porsche, decided to build a new car to suit his needs – the 356.
The success of the 356 and the death of Ferdinand Porsche in 1951 gave Ferry the confidence to follow in his father's footsteps and continue designing cars. One of his most famous designs was the Spyder 550, a car that would prove very successful in races.
By now, the general line of the company seemed evident, as in 1964 another sporty model, the 911, another car with a air-cooled, boxer, rear-mounted engine. The design team for this car was led by Ferry's oldest son, Ferdinand Alexander Porsche. this car would take the legacy of the 550 Spyder even further, winning races and rallies. Testimony to the success of the 911 is the fact that it's still in production today, despite being heavily modified.
Porsche was going to change its status in 1972 from a limited partnership to a public limited company, which meant that now Porsche would be run by a board of directors supervised by family members. In 1974, at the Paris Auto Show, Porsche unveils the new 911 Turbo, with exhaust turbocharger and pressure regulator.
When the 924 was entered in production in 1975, Porsche took a leap of faith because it had not experienced with front-mounted engines for a long time. By Porsche standards, the 928 was an oddity, with its front-mounted V8 engine made out of metal alloy. Then, in 1981, a new transaxle model is added to the Porsche line-up, the 944. The high-performance Porsche 959 is unveiled at the Frankfurt Auto Show in 1985. It will go on to win a lot of races and rallies, the best known being the Paris-Dakar.
A new technological leap was made in 1988 when the 911 Carrera 4 with all-wheel drive was introduced on the market. Then, in 1989, the “Tiptronic” automatic gearbox system is fitted on Porsches. In 1991, Porsche becomes the first car manufacturer to fit driver and passenger airbags on all its models.
The Boxter model is introduced in 1996 after 3 and a half years of development. That same year, Porsche celebrates 1million units being produced. Two years later, Ferry Porsche dies at the age of 88 but the company moves on and has a great season at Le Mans with the 911 GT1, coming in first and second. This was going to be only the beginning for Porsche, which continued with the very sporty and high-performance models Boxster S and the Carrera GT in 2000.
In 2002 Porsche entered the SUV market with the unconventional Cayenne and its later versions, the Cayenne Turbo and Turbo S. The next model on the line-up for Porsche, announced for 2009 is the Panamera, a four-door sedan. With this new model, Porsche seems set to take on a whole new market, directly competing with other luxury brands such as Mercedes, BMW and Audi.
2004 Porsche 911 Consumer Reviews
seventeeninternet, 12/05/2015
Carrera 4S AWD 2dr Coupe (3.6L 6cyl 6M)
Best Porsche despite what "purists" say
Internet says these cars blow up but it's just not the issue the purists would have you believe. Stories stem from early IMS history, but failure rate is really much lower than Toyota and other "reliable" manufacturers. This is the car that saved Porsche in 1999. I've owned 2 other Toyotas and have never really had a sports car- Im 60 years old now, not a wealthy person, but mostly been on the conservative side of family car type ownership.
I love this car because it is an icon, beautiful, comfortable and untouchable from a performance and racing legacy point of view. I would buy another.
Buyer beware however, these cars are often abused, but they can take it like no other make.
Personally I think the 996s are one of the best 911 designs, because it was the first thoughtful departure from the old VW bug aesthetic...from the 1998 models forward, the Porsche became a modern car. Porsche sold more of this 996 series than all other series prior, so they did something very right. Just look at the brand new 991 models, they are very similar to the innovative design of Pinky Lai and that design language is carried on today. The 996 headlights were a style complaint from many of the owners of the 1999 model - but Porsche fixed that the following year of the new 911- the design is not ugly (subjective), but again innovative for the time. In fact, the lights came directly from the GT1 high performance exotic Porsche. Then the lights were moved to the Boxster - which preceded the new 996 911 and was considered a good thing. Owners of the pricier 911 didn't want their ride to look like the cheaper Boxster from a distance. Water cooled is a more reliable than the air cooled and interior comfort is on par with modern vehicles. The interior is very comfortable. I drove from Boston to Hershey Pennsylvania - 7 hours and didn't feel stiff or achy at all. Very surprised, but pleased. Only real complaint is that cabin noise had a lot of engine and wheel/ tire noise and can be tiresome after many miles of highway driving. On the flip side it's sound is intoxicating when accelerating and cornering, giving occupants the visceral feeling of driving in a true race car legend.
I now have 99,000 miles on this car and this is still my daily driver- 90 miles per day all year round. We live in New England where snow and ice is a regular occurrence. Super stable in the snow and wet for such a light car.
After all these years, I still get thumbs up from all age drivers and pedestrians.
The 4S model (mine) is the Turbo look style so it has all of the great wide body wheel wells, has Turbo (large) brake discs, Turbo clutch, sits very low and was like that stock in 2004. All the rage these days , racer boys slam their rides to the ground for the right stance. Porsche figured that out ages ago and the car still looks and performs better than any modern car today.
I've had two main problems though: a torn CV boot on the front wheel viscous drive transmission, caused a bearing to fail and killed my differential. I replaced that with a used unit for $ 3K. Power steering fluid got low every few months. A major leak was found in the steering rack at 99.7K miles and decided to sell the car.
I love this car. After changing away from the summer sticky tires to all weather radials, the noise in the car is now very tolerable by -10dB from before and the tire wear is superb. Finding replacement parts has been easy for plastic, light bulbs and small parts. Transmissions, glass and remarkably, carpet is hard to impossible to find. Gas mileage is very good at 31 mpg with Premium, and about 23 with middle grade unleaded (89 octane).
I frequent PCA club events and car shows as a spectator, but people ALWAYS say you should be showing that car, because it is extraordinary in its lines, color (Midnight blue metallic-special order color and Natural All leather interior) and sound.
If you can get one, do it. The 996 is an incredible deal right now because the purists are poo-pooing the water cooled machines driving the price down. Btw: air cooled may be interesting from a design point of view but the reason Porsche is still in business and still the king of racing is because the water cooling allowed more horsepower in a smaller engine size which translates to a better power to weight ratio. Interestingly, new 911's have a smaller block, with turbo and automatic transmissions - because they are faster and again lower power to weight ratio. Still water cooled, just like all other cars on the planet. Whats the point in having a great car and keeping it in the garage? Get a boost to your street cred, have FUN driving EVERY day and enjoy that rush acceleration and flat hard cornering gives you. No one drives this car without finishing the ride with a big grin on their face. I think that if a car makes you smile after every drive, many years of ownership, many miles, it is a very good value indeed.
stressvanquish, 04/06/2014
Carrera Rwd 2dr Coupe (3.6L 6cyl 6M)
40th Anniversary 911
Love this 40th Anniversary 911... It is a blast to drive and been reliable driving all over east coast... Rides great for a true sports muscle car. Ice cold A/C
I did change the Navigation Head unit, get one with a radio it looks better and it does not not get outdated . The car is beautiful a head turner acceleration is instant in any gear the clutch is crisp...
foderntider, 08/26/2007
First Porsche
During this past year I test drove and researched every Porsche made from 1996-2007. I chose the 2004 Anniversary. I loved its price, acceleration, styling, engine sound, aggressive exterior, and interior creature comforts. It has the most bang for the buck without all the added expenses of a turbo which will be my next Porsche, a 993TT. Maintenance has been marginal and fuel economy exceptional for a sports car. Heads turn wherever I go, including from other Porsche drivers trying to fiqure out what type of Porsche I'm driving. It's a novelity Porsche that packs plenty of horsepower. "She's a lady when she has to be and a whole lot more when she needs to be."
hangfly, 08/16/2018
Carrera 4S AWD 2dr Coupe (3.6L 6cyl 6M)
911 C4S is all that and more
If you have always wanted a Porsche 911, drive a vintage 2000 to 2004 C4S and you will buy one. Any air cooled fan will be converted. More horsepower, greater comfort, A/C - cooling and heating - that actually works, PSM to keep non-race car drivers off of the guard rails, front and side air bags too. And the C4S has the wide body, stiff chassis, and big red brake calipers that come with the turbo. And like the turbo, the C4S is 10mm lower to the ground than the base 911. A few recommended mods that are typically already done on these cars are aftermarket exhaust (Fabspeed on mine) and a LN Engineering IMS replacement. I also installed an Evolution Motorsports air intake. It sounds AWESOME when accelerating! Just a pure pleasure to drive. And the faster the better. I have owned one since 2015 and every time I drive it I am reminded why I love the car. And you can get one for less than $ 40K!
billfemur, 09/19/2019
2001 Porsche 911
"Buy one while you still can"
Hard to describe the insane value of the 996 TT. Very hard to resist driving it daily, walks the line of old meets new Porsche. In the end the one thing Porsche purest hate most (headlights, water cooled etc.) will be what separates it from the rest. Mezger engine with 6 speed manual and racing pedigree? Cmon, better get one before all the good example of them are gone.
fakesquiggle, 08/27/2019
2000 Porsche 911
"Phenomenal for the money."
I can hardly believe the value on these cars. It runs like a dream. I own 10 classic cars and 3 more later model cars this included. 2000 Carrera 4 is my daily driver. Incredibly dependable. I heard others say they are good cars but this thing is like bulletproof. I've had it 3 years now. I had to do some minor work on a small oil leak under hood which was quickly solved. I love that it has passed smog 2 times no sweat. Quicker then my muscle cars by a lot and much better handling.
I don't understand why the resale is so weak on these it is a well kept secret as far as I can say for money spent.
aviationmoaning, 06/10/2019
2001 Porsche 911
"Always a Thrilling Driving Experience"
I've owned the 911 TT for four years now. Every time I drive that car my impressions of the overall engineering escalate. It's a bit noisy and feels every inch of the road but who cares once you feel and see that incredible driving experience. The power, the handling, the Bose sound system, the curb appeal (and yes I like the looks of the Turbo 996) all in a 19 year old car at an incredible price. Look at the price of the new Turbos and compare. I will keep this car forever... and I will never loose a penny on this one.
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