1963 Porsche 356 Super 90 Cabriolet - Project Car - on 2040-cars
Costa Mesa, California, United States
1963 Porsche 356 Super 90Kardex shows an original S-90 in red. Mostly complete but missing some parts for sure. Engine is dis-assembled, s-90 case but non-matching numbers. Underside is freshly detailed, body was stripped bare and acid etch primed. Excellent hood. Ready for body and paint finishing.Click on any of the lower photos for a more detailed picture.
Vehicle is listed for sale locally and subject to prior sale. Additional photos of the car are available on our web site, or if there are any questions you would like answered you can e-mail us sales@wholesalecalifornia.com. Call 949-631-7456. Shipping available around the world at wholesale pricing. Delivery to most major European ports for $1,450, Melbourne or Sydney $1,650. Name the port and I will get you a rate. 70% of what we sell is sent to other countries. The 48 states open $999 or $1,850 enclosed. California delivery is responsible for sales tax and license. Payment in full by certified funds or bank wire transfer within 72 hours or before delivery.If there are any questions you would like answered you can e-mail us you can e-mail hereCall 949-631-7456For more info or to view our current inventory Wholesale California |
Porsche 356 for Sale
- 1952 porsche 356 pre a 1500 coupe
- 1965 porsche 356 c coupe, solid, very nice!(US $59,995.00)
- Porsche 356 , porsche 356b t6 coupe, beautifully restored, ready to enjoy(US $59,000.00)
- Porsche 356b(US $48,500.00)
- Porsche 365,porsche 911s targa,porsche 912e(US $66,000.00)
- (US $56,000.00)
Auto Services in California
Yes Auto Glass ★★★★★
Yarbrough Brothers Towing ★★★★★
Xtreme Liners Spray-on Bedliners ★★★★★
Wolf`s Foreign Car Service Inc ★★★★★
White Oaks Auto Repair ★★★★★
Warner Transmissions ★★★★★
Auto blog
Drive-up bank robbery perpetrated with Cayenne and WRX
Sat, 14 Sep 2013Thieves carried out what appears to be a movie-script-perfect robbery of a bank in Sydney, Australia early on Friday morning, using two stolen high-performance vehicles in the process.
At around 11:15 AM local time, in near mid-day light, reports say that two men in masks smashed into the side of a Westpac bank in a confirmed-stolen black Porsche Cayenne. The perpetrators were armed with sledgehammers according to witness reports, and took only about five minutes to take what they were after inside of the bank.
The rapid getaway was executed in a Subaru WRX, also confirmed as a stolen vehicle, while witnesses snapped camera phone images of the illicit goings on. One Twitter user posted a few of the images to his social media feed; you can take a look at them in our small gallery below. Follow on down for the full video report, from The Sydney Morning Herald.
Are you the next Porsche 911 GT3 RS or GT2?
Thu, 17 Apr 2014Porsche typically keeps to a suitably fast schedule when it comes to rolling out increasingly hard-core performance versions of the 911. After the 997 Carrera debuted in 2004, the GT3 version followed in 2006, and by the end of the 2007, Porsche had rolled out both the GT3 RS and GT2 versions. Then the facelifted 997.5 came out in 2008 and it was back to the start: the GT3 came in 2009, the GT3 RS and GT2 RS in 2010, and the GT3 RS 4.0 in 2011. But things have slowed down some with the latest 991 generation.
The new Carrera came in 2011 and the GT3 followed in 2012. By recent history's example, we should have at least two more hardcore models by now, but we don't. Maybe the engineers in Zuffenhausen have had their hands full fixing the spontaneous-combustion issues with the existing GT3, or maybe their attentions have been focused elsewhere altogether. But if these spy shots are anything to go by, it seems like they're back on the job.
Now we don't know if this prototype foreshadows a new GT3 RS or a GT2, but it sure looks more hard-core than the existing GT3 that many purists have derided as too soft, what with its automatic transmission and four-wheel steering.
2014 Porsche 911 Turbo S
Wed, 04 Sep 2013A Wicked-Fast Street Legal Multi-Tool
Walter Röhrl was carving up the circuit in the Porsche 911 Turbo S like a skilled Jedi Master - and I was sitting next to him, mesmerized by the breathtaking show. I had strapped myself securely into the front passenger bucket of the all-new coupe less than a minute earlier, expecting nothing more than a few quick laps around a track at the hands of another celebrated race driver. Been there, done that. Many times, actually.
Yet this was different. Röhrl was not only calculated and methodical in his approach, but his rally-tuned cerebrum appeared to be actively reading available grip levels while effortlessly tossing the all-wheel-drive Porsche into each corner at gut-wrenching speeds. His hands were moving rapidly, sending tiny steering corrections to the front tires, and he was using every inch of the track to extract more speed. We launched over a curb, dropped a wheel in the dirt and then drifted around a wide off-camber turn. His human precision and focus was astounding, and the performance he was extracting from the machine was just short of breathtaking.