Sports Sedan? Really?
I've had a few Cayman S's as loaners, nothing handles quite like a mid engined car
I've looked for years for an OEM rear seat delete package for the 993. They pop up once in a while on eBay or in classifieds, but are gone in an instant and/or are the wrong color, etc.. They have two built in storage cabinets in the bottom. Very cool and it's rare to see that option on factory ordered cars.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worl...port-dash.html
I remember another anecdote in a biography of Gilles Villeneuve about how he routinely drove rental cars until they were smoking heaps. The story I remember was funny -- the story teller (forgot who) rode shotgun, while Gilles' wife got in the backseat. She immediately dove for the floorboard -- "I can't watch!" Gilles proceeded to drive so fast that he bounced off of parked cars.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpo8RDyOEWY
But cruising long distance could tire one out a bit, relatively speaking (I could fall asleep easy driving a Mercedes, it's so relaxing.) Plus there's the sound and heat from the motor right behind your head. And it's small. It's definitely a sports car yet it feels like a Rolls Royce when you compare it to something like a Lotus Exige. It's nothing at all like a hardcore old school sports car, in fact it's very mild-mannered when you're just out cruising. I wouldn't hesitate at all to drive one across country, it would be a fun road trip adventure. And there's more storage space in a Cayman over the 997 (there's a storage space in the rear and there's the front trunk.)
You should drive one and see if it fits you. It's definitely a weekend car in my mind, but I know several people who use one as a daily. Fit and finish is superb and you can option it out (like any Porsche) with all the amenities you want or get the lightweight Cayman R instead.
The old story about Porsche not wanting to put a higher performance motor in them because people might stop buying 997s has some validity. The Cayman doesn't have prestige or iconic value that the 911 variants hold, but they could easily be argued to be a better over all handling sports car. They are just so perfectly balanced that it's scary. Mid-engine design really makes sense, just ask Ferrari.







