I'm looking for thoughts and feedback for something that has been eating at me for a while. This is a long winded rant that I've been giving thought to for quite a while now...
I'm thinking about selling my laguna blue 2008 AP2 S2000. I never thought I would write those words.
The S2000 is a great car- very involving driver's car. The issue is I don't drive it very much anymore; it mostly just sits in my garage. I've started to treat it less like a car and more like a collector's item/investment.
They are definitely appreciating in value. Although it's not as profitable as some might realize. The car is definitely worth more money now that it was 3 years ago when I bought it... but I don't know if it's appreciated enough to cover the cost of insurance, taxes, registration and maintenance I've paid on it. I don't know if they actually appreciate fast enough to cover the cost of annual insurance and registration (close to ~$1000 a year). As far as profitable investments go, I can think of better/more profitable ways to invest my money.
This issue actually started about a year ago when I bought my black 2009 NC Miata. That was the first time I told my wife I was considering selling the S2000. Not because I disliked the S2000, but because I found myself driving the NC Miata about ~3 times as much as the S2000. I mentioned to my wife a few times that I just didn't know if the S2000 had much of a purpose for me anymore because I was driving the NC so much and the S2000 so little.
To be clear, the S2000 is faster than the NC Miata. It has considerably more power (237hp vs 167hp), although it is a good bit heavier (~2850 lbs vs ~2480 lbs). Above 6000rpm, the S2000 is a riot to drive! The problem is I don't run it out to redline very often... and below 6000rpm, my NC felt just as quick, if not quicker. And being a lighter car, the NC was a bit more fun to toss around. The S2000 is hyper-focused, which can be a blast! But these days, I don't drive it in anger much.
I enjoy the top-down pleasure of owning a roadster on a nice day, with a bit of spirited driving in between. The issue I found when I owned the NC was that I could get the same experience for a fraction of the cost and without the "investment" concerns.
I find myself not wanting to tinker with the S2000 due to the investment nature of the car and not wanting to devalue the car. Bolt-ons wouldn't do much for it anyway (they're pretty tapped out from the factory) and I've considered a supercharger, but the price of used F22C engines makes me hesitate... most of the F22C's engines I've seen lately (mostly on Ebay) have been in the $5000-$6500 range, used (they don't make them new anymore). That's also part of the reason I have little interest in tracking the car: as parts become more rare, they're becoming expensive and more difficult to find.
By contrast, when I owned the NC I didn't really care if I blew a motor. It was just an excuse to pull a 2.5L out of a Ford Fusion in a junkyard for $400 and with a few bolt-ons make ~170-180whp and ~170-180wtq on a motor that bolts right into the 2400-2500 lbs car. Want a brand new engine instead? No problem, Ford will sell you a brand new 2.5L long-block for a couple grand. Break something on the track? No problem, Mazda Motorsports exists and is awesome. Want reasonable priced upgrades? Flyin Miata is a few hours away from me and Goodwin Racing exists... Get a scratch on the car in a store parking lot? Who cares, it's a Miata, not a collector's item. Want to have fun with the car? You don't need to rev it to the moon to get it moving, it's not fast by any means, but it's peppy enough to have a good time at lower speeds.
I am not saying the NC is a better car than the S2000. But I am illustrating why I drove my NC far more often than my S2000 when I owned it.
These days, the car I end up driving the most is my old 105hp E36 M3box EK Civic hatch. I can pitch that bucket of bolts around with abandon and I don't care if I break something on it. The old saying is true: it's more fun to drive a slow car fast than it is to drive a fast car slow. I've owned several 400-500hp cars over the years; and none of them have been as much fun to drive as some of the slow E36 M3boxes I've pitched around.
I sold my NC last year, not because I didn't like the car (I loved it), but because it didn't class well into autocross or time attack and I used the funds from selling it to finance an autocross/time attack car. Mistakes were made.
In regards to "why the NC?": we've owned all 4 generations of Miata and the NC was my favorite by a good margin. The NA/NB are fun, but they are rattle cans by comparison that I never really chose over my S2000. The ND is phenomenal (besides the numb electric steering), but I don't hardly fit in that car; which is why I didn't buy an ND years ago. I literally fit better in the NA/NB than I do the ND. If I were a smaller person (I'm about 6'2", 215 lbs) I probably would have bought an ND a few years ago. The NC is the sweet spot for me.
I struggled to understand how the NC Miata was so much lighter (~350 lbs is substantial for cars of seemingly similar size) than the S2000 with nearly identical interior space until I started digging into it. I figured out a few things:
-Pretty much everything on the S2000 is stamped steel (as was just about everything designed in the 90's). The NC made heavy (or light?!?) use of aluminum for a plethora of components.
-The S2000 is a physically longer car. That doesn't translate into more passenger space, as they lengthened the hood to push the engine further back in the engine bay. There's nearly 2 feet of space between the F22C engine and the radiator (way more than the NC). The NC's engine is further back than the NA/NB, but not as far back at the S2000, giving it less of a rearward weight bias (52/48 vs 50/50). The NC's hood is shorter, giving you less space between the engine and radiator.
-The S2000 has a powered convertible top that adds weight to the car. The NC's is manual (sans PRHT).
-The S2000 has legitimate roll hoops behind the driver/passenger that actually extend all the way to the floor. This adds weight and takes away interior space. The NC essentially has "style bars" bolted in right behind the seats, that are much smaller/lighter and don't remove interior space.
If I sold the S2000, I could pick up a very nice NC for likely less than half of what I could sell the S2000 for... with the other half, I would throw the money towards paying off my daily driver, with the goal of having my daily paid off within a few months and being completely debt free (aside from our mortgage). When our oldest kids move out (hopefully within the next 5-6 years), my goal long term is to sell our current house, downsize and have enough equity that we can be completely debt free around that time. If I paid off my only other debt (monthly car payment), I would use the money saved to throw more cash at my mortgage and into retirement. To be clear, I don't need to do this; monthly we're doing well financially. I would just like the ability to be debt free within 5-7 years and the freedom to take a pay cut if I wanted to leave my current profession.
I don't want to live so miserly that I can't enjoy living. But I'm not sure that I'm getting my money's worth out of the S2000, with it mostly just sitting in the garage, when I might enjoy another NC just as much on a regular basis (I would likely drive it more, due to it being less of an investment) for far less money. At this point, I think the NC is pretty much fully depreciated (current insane market notwithstanding), so long term, I don't think I would lose anything if I ever changed my mind. I would likely mod it just a bit (I have no interest in another track car build, but adjusting it occasionally to suit my wants for a fun street car sounds appealing), but mostly it would just be for date nights and cruising on a nice warm sunny day with the top down, with the occasional HPDE day sprinkled in here or there, just for fun. I've autocrossed the S2000, but I'm hesitant about tracking it due to the investment factor and how much the cost of a new motor is in the case something happened to it (i.e. I'm an idiot that is just one money-shift away from hearing bad noises).
I'm planning on taking my time, test driving a few NC's back to back with my S2000 and seeing how I feel before I make any rash decisions. There have been a few cars over the years that I thought I really liked, but upon re-driving them, I realized it was all in my head.
I've been mulling over this idea for a year now and figured I would get some feedback from my fellow car guys. The only thing that has really held me back was the idea that if I regretting selling it, I know how difficult it would be to find another laguna blue AP2 S2000 with a clean Carfax and low-ish miles for a reasonable price. That's really the only reason I didn't sell it when I bought my NC...
Has anyone on here ever bought a car they lusted after, just to eventually watch it sit in the garage? Did you sell it? Any regrets, one way or another? Thoughts?