Magnus, 75 Euro is the one to have (i'm a little biased)Probably THE most undervalued in my mind.
growing up in the late 70s this was THE car.
mine is the 2 nd oldest US 76 -930.
i am looking for another-maybea 75 Euro
First, rarest, lightest...and 15bhp more than US versions.
Over here in Europe they are already quite sought after, and prices are moving, with good, original 75s in the $100k area.
Ciao
Andrea
Andrea
Early S registry #1082
75 turbo.....
must have item
its the NEW 65 (65 Is the new S)
A FEW PORSCHES
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Early S Registry #235
rgruppe #111
I imagine we'll be having this discussion about the 996 GT3 in about 15-20 years...not so much for the 997s, though, as that's when they got all "electronic".
I'll take mine with no Traction Control Nanny, please...
-Marco
SReg. #778 OGrp: #8 RGrp: #---
TLG Auto: Website
Searching for engine #907495 and gearbox 902/1 #229687
I think the 75 turbos are like the 65 911's and the 76-77 turbos like the 66-67 911S and 78-79 turbo's like the 69-73 911 S. The turbo is a very different car it has always been unappreciated by the Porsche crowd but the rest of the collector market has taken notice. These were built in fairly small quantities, a lot of them wrecked, slope nosed, modded to death. Expensive as hell to properly maintian so many of them were not. I just sold a low mileage original 79 so I expect market to double in value in the next 12-18 months.
Phil
Early S Junkie # 658
Wise words and solid comparisons. Personally, I'm not too fond of 77s because of the addition of power brakes - not enough of a pucker factor when you ask them to slow you down - but the 76 and 79 cars rank very high on my "have to own" list. I also have a soft spot for the 89 5-speed cars, and not simply because they are one-year-only; the way they drive is just ... well ... different.
Very special cars, the Turbos; but like you said, Phil, they suffer from lack of maintenance.
We are going through an original-owner 89 cab for a customer right now that is the perfect example of the above statement. The bill just keeps climbing because the scheduled maintenance or upkeep wasn't done and now everything needs to be fixed at once in order to get the car to pass smog so it can be registered and he can sell the car. Things like cam end o-rings, cam oil feed lines, vacuum hoses everywhere, breather hoses, smog pump belt, cap, rotor, wires, turbocharger (melted!), catalytic converter, clutch disc, etc. etc. etc.
-Marco
SReg. #778 OGrp: #8 RGrp: #---
TLG Auto: Website
Searching for engine #907495 and gearbox 902/1 #229687
A friend of mine has a NON M491 Silver Speedster, identical with the raj's photo. i drove it today.
I'm agree with Raj. I like this type of car much more than common large Speedster...
Registry Member #1414
NOSGRUPPE