Car of the Week: 1965 Porsche 911

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This specific 911 on offer was delivered new through Parisian Porsche dealer Sonauto to U.S. Army Col. John Price, based in Orléans, France. It was built to U.S. specification, allowing its new owner to bring it stateside. Early 911s—cars produced during 1964 and 1965—are rare, as few intact examples have survived.

When Porsche was just starting out, color was not the Paint-to-Sample festival it is today. This car, chassis No. 301450, was delivered not in ho-hum white, but in striking Bali Blue with a black leather interior. Notable is that the vehicle retains its matching engine, No. 901615, and was optioned with a gas Webasto heater, a loudspeaker, and an antenna. Evidently, Col. Price was a big spender and a careful custodian. Bringing his 911 to the U.S. in December of 1965, first to Kansas and later to Colorado, he kept his car until 2012, when it was acquired by the consignor, a Southern California–based Porsche collector.

It then received a no-expense-spared restoration by noted restorer and Porsche Cars of America (PCA) judge Tom Drummond. The two-year job included bodywork and a bare-metal respray in the original color, while the matching-numbers 2.0-liter engine and five-speed transmission were rebuilt by Precision Motion of Colton, Calif.

read more: https://www.yahoo.com/tech/car-week-early-porsche-911-120000034.html
 
TBH the '65 through '69 (Gen 1) 911's are my favorite.
they're simple, go fast enough, will get up around 30 mpg (when you keep your foot out of it). :thu:
 
My dad had a 72 for a while. I like this look a little better but both gorgeous. My dad's was a light beige with matching interior. Ugly as shit but still a beautiful car.
 
While I do like the vintage 911's.... my favorite are the normally aspirated that had the wide body fender flares but didn't have the turbo whale tale.... I want to say they were called "California Carrera" or such.

1994_porsche_911-carrera-4-widebody_964_002_web-45778.jpg


Some of them just had a little functional duck tail that was functional without looking like a picnic table.

Here... Found one. Understated and fuckin' cool.

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While I do like the vintage 911's.... my favorite are the normally aspirated that had the wide body fender flares but didn't have the turbo whale tale.... I want to say they were called "California Carrera" or such.

1994_porsche_911-carrera-4-widebody_964_002_web-45778.jpg


Some of them just had a little functional duck tail that was functional without looking like a picnic table.

Here... Found one. Understated and fuckin' cool.

0a2208491c6c1fdbb6ab3f26b71713aa.jpg
yea, i really like the late 80's, NON whale tale 911's.
they're not quite as wide as those ^^, but wider than the Gen 1's.
 
yea, i really like the late 80's, NON whale tale 911's.
they're not quite as wide as those ^^, but wider than the Gen 1's.

I've driven a couple from that era... a later Carrera Cabrio and an earlier 930 turbo slant nose. I can say that the extra rubber is very welcome if you like corners because that era was VERY tail happy if you weren't careful with the application of throttle through the corner. :messedup:
 
yes, rule #1 when driving 911's thru corners is DO NOT suddenly take your foot off the gas in a corner.
if you need to slow down for that corner do it BEFORE you get into it and then GENTLY increase throttle thru the corner. :idea:
 
@mongooz ... I came back to this thread because Magnus Walker recently posted a video of a 964 turbo edition that I don't remember.

I really really love how the air intakes are hidden in the rear fender flares! So often they're ugly tacked on scoops, but these look like those fit, cut lines that an athlete gets when they have very little body fat!

 
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