![]() |
Hey - nice, uh, "Cayman"?
I was reading the news and stumbled across an article from Italy about the new Boxster coupe. Cayman. This is the name Porsche has decided to name one of the best ideas they've had in years - the new Boxster coupe. I just hope this means that Porsche spend their entire budget on R&D and only had about $1.50 left over for marketing.
Funny thing is, "Cayman" was the name Ford used for a model of thier Festiva they sold in parts of Europe, so you know it'll have a little extra panache there. :roll: Oh well. The still look like really cool cars. I guess I'll have to get mine with the model badge delete option. "Cayman? Nope, this here's a Porsche 987 Coupe". |
Is Cayman a reference to the Cayman Islands?
Porsche is batting one thousand when it comes to new model names...first it was a meat seasoning, now it's an island in the Carribean with advantageous tax laws. :roll: |
Chris
Is there a way that article can be translated into english? Mike |
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
Quote:
For all you "Googlers" out there, here is the link to their translation page. I believe it uses the same or similar software and has the same issues. http://www.google.com/language_tools?hl=en PS: The car looks really cool, but I wish Porsche would stick to using the "Type" number (911, 944, or mmm 959, etc.) and/or something from their racing past (Carrera, Targa, etc.). IMHO, Geeze, I mean the "Porsche Hill Climb" would be a better name. At least the german word for it, which is currently escaping me. :? |
D'oh, 4 minutes too late. :oops: But my PS still stands.
|
BTW, does anyone see the pattern emerging? Carrera, Cayenne, Caymen. Sounds like they're taking a page from Chevy's marketing book with the whole "first letter is always the same" thing (think Caveleir, Camaro, Corvette, Corsica, Cobalt, Corvair). Personally, if there is one company I want Porsche to emulate, its Chevrolet :roll:.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Cayman also cai•man n. pl. cai•mans n : an alligator-like reptile of Central America and South America having a more heavily armored belly [syn: caiman] Any of various tropical American crocodilians of the genus Caiman and related genera, resembling and closely related to the alligators. |
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:32 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.