1966 Porsche 911 Base 2.0l on 2040-cars
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
1966 PORSCHE 911 - VIN# 302836 - Manufacture Date 09/66
We are proud to offer this 1966 Porsche 911 to the highest bidder at a NO RESERVE auction.
This car was just pulled out of dry storage since 1988. It is a fine restoration project. It looks like someone started to do some body work back in the late 80's. The floors have also been removed and the car is ready for some new ones. The body gaps a look great and the car appears to be accident free. There is some rust along rocker panels, door jams and in the trunk. All of the doors and lids open and align as they should.
The interior seats are in tact and present. They will need some attention like the rest of the car, but the fact that they are there, is a good thing. The dashboard is all intact and appears to be original. The top of the dashboard is cracked and peeling. The original steering wheel, gauges, and radio are all there as shown. There is also a stack of the original carpeting included with the car (see pics)
There is no engine with the car (as shown). The original transmission is included among other various parts (see pics). The car rolls and steers as it should.
A $500.00 (non-refundable) deposit is due at the end of the auction. The balance to be paid within 7 days. This is a NO RESERVE AUCTION - SOLD to the highest bidder
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Porsche rules out Macan, 911 hybrids
Fri, 24 Oct 2014Believe it or not, between the 918 Spyder, the Cayenne and the Panamera, Porsche offers more plug-in hybrid models than any other brand. Yes, Porsche. But don't expect that trend to continue. At least, not in the immediate future.
According to Top Gear, the E-Hybrid powertrain in the Cayenne and Panamera is too big to fit into the smaller Macan. A future hybrid system could be small enough to fit, but with the current technology still fresh, that'd still be some ways down the twisting road.
It stands to reason, then, that if the system wouldn't fit in the Macan, it wouldn't fit in the Boxster or Cayman, either. But what of the 911? Surely Porsche would like to stick it to BMW and its new i8, and proved it could do a hybrid 911 when it rolled the GT3 R Hybrid (pictured) out onto the race track over four years ago. But Zuffenhausen is reportedly in no rush to put that idea into production - not for the current 911 and not for the next one, either.
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