2017 PORSCHE 911 CARRERA

3.0L H6 TurboRWDMANUALgasturbo
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$76,180 maintenance + known platform issues
~$15,236/yr · 1,270¢/mile equivalent · $46,612 maintenance + $11,968 expected platform issues
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3.0L H6 Twin Turbo
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3.6L H6
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 991.2-generation 911 Carrera with the 3.0L twin-turbo flat-six (9A2 engine) is generally solid, but early turbocharged engines faced bore scoring and piston cracking issues that Porsche quietly addressed with revised components. When they fail, they fail catastrophically and expensively.

Cylinder Bore Scoring and Piston Failure (Early 2017 Models)

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 30,000-70,000 mi
Symptoms: Metallic rattling or knocking from engine, especially cold start, Excessive oil consumption (more than 1 qt per 1,000 mi), White or blue smoke from exhaust on startup, Low compression on cylinder leak-down test, Check engine light with misfire codes
Fix: Complete engine rebuild or short-block replacement required. Early 2017 engines used pistons prone to cracking at the ring lands. Porsche issued revised pistons (part number update mid-2017) but never issued a recall. Expect 40-60 hours labor for engine-out rebuild with machine work, new pistons, rings, bearings, gaskets, and reinstallation. Some shops opt for factory short-block exchange.
Estimated cost: $18,000-28,000

Transmission Oil Cooler Line Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 40,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission fluid leak near front of engine, Burning smell from undercarriage, Low transmission fluid warning on dash, Harsh or delayed shifts due to low fluid, Visible drips under car after parking
Fix: Rubber cooler lines run along hot engine and fail prematurely due to heat degradation. Requires replacing both supply and return lines plus refilling PDK fluid. 3-4 hours labor. This is a known weak point on 991.2 cars—many shops now recommend preemptive replacement if original lines still present above 50k miles.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400

Transmission Mount Failure (PDK Models)

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 50,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunking or thud when shifting from Park to Drive or Reverse, Excessive drivetrain vibration during acceleration, Visible sag or tear in rubber mount during inspection, Transmission feels like it's shifting position under load
Fix: Rear transmission mount (bridge mount) deteriorates from heat and torque cycles. Requires lift access and exhaust removal for proper fitment. 2-3 hours labor. Use OEM Porsche mount—aftermarket versions often fail within 20k miles.
Estimated cost: $600-1,000

High-Pressure Fuel Pump Failure

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Intermittent or complete no-start condition, Rough idle and hesitation under acceleration, Fuel pressure fault codes (P0087, P0088), Engine stalling at idle or low speed, Whining noise from fuel pump area
Fix: Direct-injection system uses high-pressure pump driven off camshaft. When pump fails, metal debris contaminates fuel system requiring fuel filter, injector inspection, and sometimes injector replacement. Pump replacement alone is 4-5 hours; full system contamination cleanup adds 8-12 hours. Address NHTSA recall for fuel line fittings simultaneously.
Estimated cost: $2,500-6,000

Turbocharger Wastegate Rattle

Common · low severity
Symptoms: Metallic rattling sound at idle or light throttle (1,500-2,500 RPM), Sound disappears under load or at higher RPM, No performance loss or check engine light, More noticeable when engine is cold
Fix: Wastegate actuator rod bushings wear, causing audible rattle. Does not affect performance but is annoying. Porsche considers it 'within specification' unless excessive. Turbo replacement is the only permanent fix (8-10 hours per side), but most owners live with it. Some success with aftermarket bushing kits (2 hours labor per turbo) but results vary.
Estimated cost: $200-400 for bushing kit attempt; $4,000-6,000 per turbo if replacing

PDK Clutch Pack Wear (High-Performance Driving)

Rare · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Slipping during hard acceleration (RPM flare without speed increase), Shuddering during low-speed maneuvers or parking, Burning smell after spirited driving, Delayed or harsh engagement when cold, Transmission fault warning on display
Fix: Track use or repeated launch control cycles accelerate clutch wear. PDK overhaul requires transmission removal, disassembly, clutch pack replacement, and mechatronic unit inspection. 18-22 hours labor plus parts. Porsche PDK is generally bulletproof under normal use but doesn't tolerate sustained abuse like some dual-clutch boxes.
Estimated cost: $8,000-12,000
Owner tips
  • Check build date carefully—2017 models built before June 2017 are higher risk for piston/bore scoring; later VINs received revised components
  • Replace transmission cooler lines preventively at 50k miles; $1,000 now beats $8,000 transmission rebuild later
  • Avoid extended idling or short trips under 10 miles—turbo flat-sixes need full heat cycles to prevent carbon buildup
  • Compression test or leak-down test during pre-purchase inspection is mandatory; bore scoring often starts without obvious symptoms
  • Use only Mobil 1 0W-40 or approved equivalent; oil spec critical for turbo and DFI system longevity
  • Budget $2,500-3,500/year for maintenance even if nothing breaks—this is a six-figure exotic, not a Camry
Buy a late-2017 or newer 991.2 with documented oil changes and you'll likely be fine; avoid early-build 2017s unless engine internals have already been replaced under warranty.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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