did 305991s appear anywhere before?....
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did 305991s appear anywhere before?....
It has been on the registry list. Mine is 992S
Believe it was not sold according to their web site as of yesterday
here is another
https://www.ebay.com/itm/1970-Porsch...5aJox5&vxp=mtr
Not sure if this one has been talked about it:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/1973-Porsch...BaJZSi&vxp=mtr
This one is back. Indications are it won't make $195,000 again. Saw it at Amelia in '14 and was disappointed. YMMV.
https://www.conceptcarz.com/profile/...sche-911S.aspx
VIN = 9113300794
Yuuuuuuuuuuuup --- several times, as I recall . . .
http://www.early911sregistry.org/for...ght=9113300794
http://www.early911sregistry.org/for...ght=9113300794
Meanwhile --- the current pitch . . .
'. . . Back in 1973 car enthusiasts Suzie Hunt and Scott Campbell decided to throw caution to the wind and seriously upgrade their mode of transportation. The problem was Porsche dealers were only allotted six 911S each and since it was late in the model year most cars were already spoken for. That is unless you went to Vasek Polak a personal friend of Dr. Ferry Porsche who in 1959 had opened America's first exclusive Porsche dealership. Vasek had managed to talk the factory in to sending him twelve 911S and one of them this Porsche Silver Metallic beauty found its first home with Suzie and Scott. When the 911 arrived at Polak's it was one of two cars of its 6-unit S car lot that had been optioned with a $447 sunroof. In fact when that sunroof was combined with the coupe's other options - fog lights Recaro seats an AM/FM cassette deck and a 5-speed manual transaxle it was priced almost as much as a 2.7RS that Vasek was somehow peddling as a street legal beast. But after a bit of consideration the couple decided to stick with the S. Scott and Suzie wasted no time stretching the 911's legs making an all-out run from Reno to Salt Lake City long before events like the Silver State Classic Challenge were even considered. Their rules were simple: obey established speed limits which in 1973 amounted to just townships and keep the car above 100 MPH. The result was an average speed of 95.8 MPH with top speeds of 130 MPH for Suzie and 150 MPH for Scott accomplished on a long downhill charge. The next three years would see Scott and Suzie dominate Porsche Club of America autocross events across Nevada and Northern California. And in 1977 Suzie won the Porsche Club of America Porsche Parade . . .'
.......
I should have access but all I get at https://www.pca.org/classified-ad/325539 is
Access Denied
You are not authorized to access this page.
I suspect the ad has already been pulled.