Sample Reports
See What Flat Six Intel Actually Delivers
Before you spend $50,000, $75,000 or $150,000 on a Porsche, it helps to know whether you’re looking at a genuinely special car or simply a well-marketed one.
Flat Six Intel combines a proprietary Porsche market database, artificial intelligence, and human review to analyse specification, transaction history, pricing, and market context. The result is not a valuation. It is decision intelligence.
The goal is simple:
Help buyers separate the gold from the dirt.
The reports below use real market data and real listings. Customer details have been removed.
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Sample Report 1
2018 Porsche 911 GTS
When “Well Optioned” Doesn’t Mean Valuable
At first glance this car looks exceptional.
The listing contains a long list of Porsche option language, premium audio, Sport Chrono, Race-Tex interior, Rear-Axle Steering and more. Many buyers would assume those options justify the asking price.
The problem?
Several of the most prominent features are standard equipment on a 991.2 GTS and therefore contribute little or no additional value.
Our analysis separates genuine paid-option value from equipment that every GTS already received from the factory. Once that distinction is made, the asking price becomes much harder to justify.
This is exactly the type of car that can look stronger than it really is.
Report conclusion: Scrutinize
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Sample Report 2
2017 Porsche 911 Carrera S Manual
The Hidden Value Example
This is the opposite problem.
Many buyers would dismiss this car immediately because of the asking price.
Our analysis found something more interesting.
The car carries a manual transmission, Rear-Axle Steering, Sport Chrono, carbon interior trim and, most importantly, Maritime Blue Paint-to-Sample.
That changes the conversation.
Rather than asking whether this is an expensive Carrera S, the correct question becomes whether this is an exceptional Carrera S that deserves a premium.
The answer is nuanced. The car is expensive relative to comparable sales, but the specification deserves serious consideration before any buyer walks away.
This is where data, context and judgement matter.
Report conclusion: Qualified Support
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Sample Report 3
2021 Porsche 911 Turbo S
When We Find The Same VIN
Occasionally, Flat Six Intel is able to match a live listing to a prior public transaction involving the exact same VIN.
When that happens, the analysis becomes even more powerful.
In this example, we identified the same Turbo S selling publicly for $222,000 before later appearing as a retail listing at $260,000.
Many services would stop there and simply declare the car overpriced.
We didn’t.
The same prior sale also revealed Paint-to-Sample Iris Blue Metallic, PCCB, Exclusive Manufaktur content, Sport Exhaust, Front Axle Lift and other significant specification signals.
The result is a more sophisticated conclusion:
The prior sale provides negotiation leverage.
The specification provides a legitimate argument for some premium.
The question is not whether the seller is wrong. The question is how much of the premium is justified.
That is a far more useful answer for a buyer.
Report conclusion: Prior Sale Detected - Premium Requires Support
Why Flat Six Intel Exists
Most buyers can see price.
Most buyers can see mileage.
Most buyers can see colour.
What they cannot easily see is:
Whether an option actually matters
Whether a feature is standard equipment
Whether a specification is genuinely rare
Whether the market historically pays for that rarity
Whether the same VIN has appeared before
Whether a seller’s premium is supported by evidence
Flat Six Intel was built to answer those questions.
Because the best buying decisions are rarely obvious.