1957 Porsche Speedster Carrera Gt Recreation...titled As 1957 Porsche on 2040-cars
Los Gatos, California, United States
This is a Porsche 356 Slate Gray Exterior with Oxblood interior, Black Canvas Top, Outlaw Carrera GT Speedster replica. Perfect understated elegance matched to the perfect Carrera appearance group of Fog Lights, Headlight Grills, Engine Lid Louvers, Leather Straps, Chrome Wide 5 Wheels with aluminium drum skins, Pegasus Decals, Dual Carrera GT mirrors, Deco Trim Delete and Carrera and Porsche Badges. Other options include carpeted trunk, Nardi wood steering wheel, full black canvas tonneau cover, beehive tail lights and the venerable 1915cc dual carb engine make this 2000 mile beauty a must have for any serious car collection. Similar car sold for $35,500 at the August 2013 Moneterey Mecum Auction. Titled as 1957 Porsche.
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Porsche Carrera GT for Sale
- Serviced low miles well maintained superb condition v10 manual very rare!(US $519,900.00)
- Serviced low miles well maintained superb condition 32mm clutch very rare!(US $519,900.00)
- 2004 porsche carrera gt, only 717 miles, stored in heated/air conditioned garage
- Black/black 8168 miles(US $479,995.00)
- Lowest mileage example, 575 miles, interior to sample. luggage.
- Lowest mileage example, 575 miles, interior to sample. luggage.(US $499,995.00)
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Auto blog
Watch the incredibly complicated operation of Porsche's new targa roof
Tue, 14 Jan 2014Despite Porsche having claimed the name, targa tops are nothing new. In addition to the semi-roofless version of the 911, plenty of cars in the past have used removable roof panels - the new Corvette Stingray has one (as have prior generations), and this type of open-air experience has been available on past vehicles like the Pontiac Solstice Coupe and Honda Civic del Sol.
But when Porsche took the top off its brand new 911 Targa here at the Detroit Auto Show, it was indeed cause for pause. Simply put, this is one of the most complicated and intricate electronic roof panel removal techniques we've ever seen, save perhaps, for the setup found on the Japanese-market Civic del Sol from the 1990s.
We won't spoil the video for you, but basically, rather than just the roof panel coming off, the entire rear glass area lifts away the body in order for the small section over the passenger compartment to slide back. This has to be incredibly expensive to repair once it inevitably breaks. And we highly doubt you'll be able to operate this mechanism at any speed.
Porsche 911 and Citro"en DS lovechild would look like this
Wed, 06 Nov 2013The early Porsche 911 and the Citroën DS were two cars produced in the same era (though the DS launched in 1955, nearly 10 years before the 911), but they were vastly different from each other. The 911 was a uniquely German, pure-bred sports car, while the French-built DS had four doors and focused more on ride quality than sporting intentions. That made it all the more surprising when we came across the 911DS, a creation that binds the rear half of the Citroën to the front of an early, longhood 911.
The folks at Brandpowder are behind the creation, which we surmise was an exercise in design rather than an actual, completed project (some of the images look Photoshopped), but it's compelling nonetheless, with a turbocharged flat-six providing 260 horsepower. We hope someone builds it - though we're sure if that happened the early 911 crowd would cry afoul at one of its increasingly rare and valuable Porsches being grafted onto an old French car.
But as Brandpowder points out lightheartedly, perhaps the creation could transcend popular car culture: "The 911DS represents the effort of two countries, a genuine attempt to join their energy and talent into one thing. We hope Germany and France will be inspired by Brandpowder's story, as a metaphor for a better and greater Europe."
Porsche prioritizes 200,000-unit sales target over exclusivity [w/poll]
Thu, 21 Aug 2014Would a Porsche still be a Porsche if it weren't as exclusive? That's the question which industry pundits are asking - and customers may soon as well - as the German automaker emerges from the fringe in pursuit of larger volumes.
A dozen years ago Porsche was barely selling over 50,000 units per annum. In a sales surge that has gathered pace as fast as a 911 Turbo, however, it was already hovering around the 100,000-unit mark a few years later. Last year it sold over 160,000, and has targeted 200,000 units by 2018. But it may not even take that long.
Automotive News reports that Porsche has advanced its targets to reach for 200,000 units by the end of this year or the next. The bump in sales would be driven particularly by the introduction of the new Macan, of which it aims to sell 50,000 units annually, starting next year. The Cayenne currently stands far and away as its most successful model. The 911 and Panamera have swapped second place a few times over the past five years, followed by the Boxster and Cayman.