1968 Porsche 912 Base 1.6l on 2040-cars
Waltham, Massachusetts, United States
Selling my 1968 Porsche 912 PROJECT. This car is considered a parts car or a very aggressive restoration.
Car was originally Irish Green (6606) with black interior. VIN is 461832
- Missing 2 front fenders and driver door - Has a 1968 Porsche 912 motor but not original to this car- Motor number is *1281815 - Motor is complete besides missing carbs ( I will install for transport) - Door tag is 461832 - 68-6606-6 - Tub and body is in pretty good shape considering the neglect - All glass is there with trim - Passenger floor seems okay drivers floor has been cut out - All suspension and brakes are there and in decent shape - 5 gauge car - Dash is all there - Seats are there (except rear lower cushion in back seat) - Interior is otherwise complete but in poor condition Car is a roller and what you see is what you get- it may be worth doing or using as a donor. Please contact me before bidding. 857-210-7805 call text or ebay message me. Please ask ALL questions BEFORE making offers. Thank you and good luck. |
Porsche 912 for Sale
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Auto blog
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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.
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The idea was to create a more affordable successor to the 959 that included its advanced all-wheel drive system and active suspension. The Audi V8 would have been replaced with one of Porsche's own design - possibly based on the it had built for Indy racing - but Dr. Ulrich Bez (who was then head of Porsche R&D long before taking the reins at Aston Martin) ultimately killed the project.