1959 Porsche 356 Cabriolet on 2040-cars
Costa Mesa, California, United States
Body Type:Cabriolet
Engine:1600
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gas
Interior Color: Red
Make: Porsche
Number of Cylinders: 4
Model: 356
Trim: US Spec. Delivery
Warranty: No
Drive Type: Four Speed
Mileage: 22,466
Options: Convertible
Exterior Color: Meissen Blue
This Cabriolet is a running driving car. Body panels and gaps are very good. The paint is twenty years old, as is the upholstery. This is a car to enjoy as, is or a great candidate for restoration. The rear of the car was repaired when it was last painted, and cracking is evident. I have pictures of the repair. Longitudinals, closing panels, and floors look substantially original, and are in good condition. Wheels are painted and dated matched, what panels I can check are also. A full tonneau is included and is in excellent condition. The original tool kit is with the car, but missing some items.
Porsche 356 for Sale
Solid 356a black cal plates excellent body gaps new interior new tires runs 56
Solid 356a black cal plates excellent body gaps new interior new tires runs 56
1965 porsche 356 super
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Genuine 1957 porsche 356a t1 speedster / runs and drives / older restoration
1957 porsche 356a 1600 coupe great driver no rust solid clean straight(US $69,000.00)
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Auto blog
Preparing for Le Mans 2014 Porsche remembers 1971 and the 917 [w/video]
Sun, 07 Apr 2013Porsche has given us another look back at its successes at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. This time it's 1971, the year that its 917 set records that haven't all been eclipsed. It's 45-kilogram magnesium tube frame was the lightest, Jackie Oliver set the fastest in-race lap with a time that still stands, and winning drivers Helmut Marko - the same Helmut Marko currently with Infiniti Red Bull Racing - and Gilles Lethem did so many laps that their distance wasn't exceeded until the Audi R15 TDI did it in 2010.
1971 was also the year of the "Pink Pig." With bodywork created by a French aerodynamics firm, the wider, rounder 917 earned the porcine moniker so Porsche painted it pink and labeled it with the cuts you'd get from a pig. Sponsor Martini was so miffed they demanded all Martini branding be removed. No one can remove the thousands of photographs taken of the car ever since. Enjoy that and more in the video below.
Porsche Cayenne spied unconstrained by camouflage
Thu, 05 Jun 2014Meet the facelifted Porsche Cayenne. Our eagle-eyed spy shooters captured this example of Porsche's freshened SUV virtually devoid of camo, giving us our clearest look yet at what the eventual mid-cycle work will do to the strong-selling Cayenne.
The overall changes do, indeed, look minor, with a reprofiled intake being the most obvious item. The headlights are still covered, so we don't know what kind of jeweling has been done, but the shape does appear identical to the current model. Overall, the changes appear totally in line with a mid-cycle refresh.
As we explained previously, a plug-in Cayenne is on the way. It will join a crop of engines that is likely to be similar to what's on offer today, with naturally aspirated, turbocharged, hybrid and diesel variants released over time.
Evo pits BMW M3 against Porsche Macan in drag battle
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In lane one we've got the all-new Porsche Macan Turbo, which boasts a twin-turbocharged, 3.6-liter V6 rated at 400 horsepower and 406 pound-feet of torque. The Porsche is fitted with a seven-speed, dual-clutch gearbox, and the 4,244-pound crossover has the traction advantage of standard all-wheel drive. In lane two is the all-new BMW M3, powered by a twin-turbo 3.0-liter inline-six rated at 425 horsepower and 406 pound-feet of torque. It is also equipped with a seven-speed, dual-clutch gearbox, but only the rear wheels of the 3,595-pound sedan are driven. Both the BMW and Porsche arrive with launch control, which helps to remove driver error off the line.
Which automaker's launch control system is better off the line? Does all-wheel-drive grip give the crossover the advantage it needs to overcome its adversary's power-to-weight advantage? Will aerodynamics factor into the results? Which would you put in your garage, and why? The video may surprise you.