My roommate came out and saw it and said is was "so you."
After a month of waiting and what amounted to nearly 14 hours round trip (should have taken 8 hours) I now have the 1971 911T Targa back home.
She certainly needs some work, but I think she is solid enough to save. From the brief bit I drove her around (I have an oil leak which is smoking on the exhaust) she went quite well and stopped well too. Not bad for sitting as long as she did--there is a 1999 inspection sticker on her.
She has a fiberglass front S bumper and fiberglass front fenders (both installed about as well as you would think). Cheap black paint (over the original silver metallic and what looks to be a viper or metallic green respray). For now she is getting rattle can epoxy black over the primered spots to make her presentable.
Some quick questions (links would be ideal) on the critical issues:
1. I need to get it back to stock (US) height so I can run stock height tires. Please tell/show me how. Also, some idiot decided to weld up the torsion bar holes in the quarter panels so I assume I have to cut some holes back in there (no biggy, the rear quarters are what needs paint anyway).
2. The longitudinal rust does not appear too horrible. Seems like only one side needs immediate attention. I want to tackle this along with the ride height adjustment. In fact the rusted out corner (PS rear) seems the lowest so I am guessing there might be some bad news when I start taking that apart.
3. Oil leak[s]. Have to figure out where it is coming from but it seems like the axles are leaking at the flanges where they meet the transmission. What kind of seal is there? Just a paper gasket? Can I use RTV to seal it? I am sure there are other leaks, but this seems like the smoke culprit. It has the newer style valve covers.
4. Is there a targa top owner's manual? I am not sure how to work it.
My goal is to have her presentable enough for four good pictures to get my PA antique plates as soon as possible. After that she is a rolling restoration with "patina" intact.
Thanks,
Ron![]()