1986 Porsche 944 on 2040-cars
Greenville, South Carolina, United States
1986
Restored Porsche 944. Newly painted the
original Metallic Gray, a limited special order color in 1986. All paint codes,
options codes and numbers match. Looks and drives great. New Clutch, Timing Belt, Water Pump, Front
and Rear Wheel Bearings. Black leather
interior refinished to match original condition. New Kenwood sound system. Additional factory option include: Power leather seats, power windows, AC, power
steering, power sunroof that is removable.
5 Speed manual. Great on gas
mileage. 136,000 miles. Car and Driver named the 944 the “Best Handling
Production Car in America.” A classic Porsche that is a blast to drive and is
increasing in value each month.
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Porsche 944 for Sale
- 1988 porsche 944 2.5l coupe 48k mile collector grade(US $17,900.00)
- 1986 porsche 944 turbo coupe 2-door 2.5l(US $9,900.00)
- 1986 porsche 944 2.5 5 speed
- 1987 porsche 944s thoroughly reconditioned by our award winning shop
- 1989 porsche 944 turbo great driver!(US $8,900.00)
- 1984 porsche 944 base coupe 2-door 2.5l(US $8,750.00)
Auto Services in South Carolina
Walker`s Auto Service ★★★★★
Truck Toyz ★★★★★
Toyota of Orangeburg ★★★★★
Toyota Of Greer ★★★★★
The Wholesale Outlet ★★★★★
Summerfield Auto Repair ★★★★★
Auto blog
LaFerrari, McLaren P1, Porsche 918 and Agera R take to Assen
Tue, 10 Jun 2014It's the show-down (sort of) we've all been waiting for. The battle of the hybrid hypercars from the performance powerhouses of Europe: Ferrari LaFerrari, McLaren P1 and Porsche 918 Spyder. No one publication has managed to get their hands on all three just yet, but this video has - and with a Koenigsegg Agera R thrown in for good measure.
The video was shot by our (unrelated) Dutch compatriots at Autoblog.nl at the TT Circuit Assen in the Netherlands. The track has played host to Champ Cars and all manner of racing bikes, but this could be the ultimate grid of actual production machinery that's ever lined up behind its start/finish line. Shame the weather was rainy and this unsurpassed array of supercars weren't really racing - more showing off for the crowds. But what a show it was. Scope out the footage in the video below.
'Latest production version' of Porsche 918 shown off on Twitter
Fri, 16 Aug 2013Porsche posted a picture of what it is calling "the latest production version" of the 2015 Porsche 918 Spyder on Twitter. It looks like the gasoline-hybrid supercar is being driven sportively on some California back roads during Monterey Speed Week.
Whatever updates were made to this version aren't visual (except for the paint), as the one Chris Harris drove last spring and another seen hot-weather testing in Nevada both had production bodies. We presume the changes are relatively minor and more than skin deep - perhaps brake calibration, suspension tuning or tweaks to the powertrain - but Porsche didn't release any more information.
The 918 Spyder is Porsche's latest supercar, which will compete with the LaFerrari and the McLaren P1 hybrid supercars. The Porsche may be the underdog of the group when considering horsepower, acceleration, top speed and price, but the 887-horsepower brute has the most advanced hybrid drivetrain of the three.
1949 Gm?nd Porsche shows the birth of an icon
Fri, 21 Mar 2014The Austrian village of Gmünd is more than just difficult to pronounce; it's also the birthplace of the Porsche brand. Before the company ever started building sports cars at its current home base near Stuttgart, the fledgling business completed several vehicles in the tiny town in Southern Austria. In this video, former Pikes Peak International Hill Climb champion Jeff Zwart takes a look at a 1949 Gmünd coupe to see how the company has evolved since its earliest days.
The thing to note about the Gmünd-built Porsches is their absolute design simplicity. The phrase "form follows function" gets bandied around a lot, but it really means something when you look at these early cars. However, the minimalism was partially out of necessity. The vehicles were meant to be sporty but certainly weren't rockets. Power came courtesy of a modified Volkswagen Beetle engine, and anything extraneous would have slowed the models down. Scroll down to watch Zwart go back in time to Porsche's beginnings.