1999 Porsche Boxster �€" Black on Grey, 5-Speed Manual, Clean
Undercarriage Why This Car Is Special The 1999 Porsche Boxster sits
at an interesting crossroads in automotive history. When Porsche
introduced the Boxster for the 1997 model year, it was the car that
arguably saved the company. By the mid-1990s, Porsche's finances
were in serious trouble, and the 911 alone wasn't enough to sustain
production. The Boxster brought in a new generation of buyers and
gave the brand a volume model without compromising its engineering
identity. Every Boxster that came out of Zuffenhausen in those
early years carried real significance �€" not just as a product,
but as a survival story. The 1999 model year represents the last
full year of the original 2.5-liter Boxster before Porsche bumped
the base engine to 2.7 liters for 2000 and refreshed the body for
2003. That makes 1997-1999 cars the purest expression of the
original 986 design �€" lower, leaner, and lighter in character
than what followed. The styling was penned by Harm Lagaay and draws
a direct visual line back to the 1993 Boxster concept car shown at
the Detroit Auto Show. Very few concept cars make it to production
this faithfully. This particular 1999 Porsche Boxster is finished
in black over a grey leather interior and equipped with the 5-speed
manual transmission �€" the combination most Boxster enthusiasts
seek out. The undercarriage photos show a car that has been on dry
pavement its whole life. No rot, no patchwork, no evidence of
neglect. That tells you a great deal about how this car was kept.
Features List - 2.5L Flat-6 Mid-Engine - 5-Speed Manual
Transmission - Black Soft Top - Grey Leather Bucket Seats - Porsche
CDR-220 Radio - Automatic Climate Control - Factory 5-Spoke Silver
Wheels - Michelin Tires - Integrated Roll Hoops - Power Windows -
Tachometer - Dual Exhaust Tip - Clean Undercarriage Mechanical The
1999 Porsche Boxster uses a 2.5-liter horizontally opposed
six-cylinder engine mounted amidships �€" directly behind the seats
and ahead of the rear axle. In the base Boxster, this engine
produced 201 horsepower and 181 lb-ft of torque. Those numbers
don't tell the whole story. The mid-engine layout gives this car a
near-perfect 50/50 weight distribution, and at a curb weight of
roughly 2,750 pounds, the power-to-weight ratio translates into
genuine driving engagement rather than straight-line performance on
paper. The 5-speed manual gearbox is the right choice here. Porsche
offered the Tiptronic automatic as an option, but the manual is
what the chassis was designed around. The throws are short and
precise, and the flat-six's usable powerband rewards drivers who
keep it in the right gear rather than relying on torque to cover
mistakes. Underneath this car, the photographs show dry, clean
structure from front to rear. The suspension components, floorpan,
and exhaust routing are all visible and free from the kind of
corrosion that typically plagues cars that spent time in northern
states or coastal environments. The Michelin tires indicate the car
is wearing quality rubber appropriate to its performance
capability. The undercarriage on a used Porsche is one of the most
important things a buyer can inspect, and this one holds up well.
One detail worth noting from the VIN structure: the tenth position
confirms this is a 1999 model year car, and the plant code confirms
Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen assembly �€" the same facility that builds
the 911. The Boxster was not farmed out to a contract manufacturer.
It was built by Porsche, on the Porsche line. Interior The grey
leather interior on this 1999 Porsche Boxster is a classic pairing
with the black exterior. Porsche used a relatively simple interior
architecture in the 986-generation Boxster �€" two seats, a
driver-focused instrument cluster, and a center console that keeps
everything within reach. There is no wasted space and very little
visual noise. The tachometer is the dominant instrument, which
tells
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