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PORSCHE 911 GT3 R HYBRID TO MAKE NORTH AMERICAN DEBUT AT PETIT LE MANS!

NEW YORK CITY (July 21, 2010) – The American Le Mans Series presented by Tequila Patrón took another monumental step toward enhancing its position as the Global Leader of Green Racing with today’s announcement that Porsche’s innovative 911 GT3 R Hybrid race car will race for the first time in North America at the Series signature event – Petit Le Mans on October 2 at Road Atlanta.
 
After debuting in April at Germany’s world-renowned Nürburgring race circuit in a six-hour event, the Porsche Hybrid challenged the 24 Hours of Nürburgring in May. It earned worldwide acclaim with its performance that had it leading many hours of the race – at times by a significant margin – until the closing two hours when a combustion engine issue forced the car to retire.
“After the 911 GT3 R Hybrid’s fantastic performance at the Nürburgring 24 Hours, we are now eager to gain more experience with the hybrid technology on a variety of race tracks,” says Hartmut Kristen, Head of Porsche Motorsport. “At the same time, we would like to show fans and customers in our most important market how our ‘race lab’ performs under racing conditions,” adds Kristen.
The Porsche Hybrid will take its place on a worldwide stage at Petit Le Mans, which not only is the Series’ cornerstone event but one of the most important endurance races in the world. This year, for the first time, it will hold the distinction of being the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup’s sole North American stop. The Intercontinental Le Mans Cup, announced by the Automobile Club de l’Ouest a year ago, will decide an international champion based on results from three Le Mans-based series on three different continents – Europe, North America and Asia.
“This is an outstanding opportunity to demonstrate the advances in automotive technologies and energy efficiencies that you won’t see in any other motorsports environment in the world,” said American Le Mans Series President and CEO Scott Atherton. “Porsche has always led by example throughout its motorsports history – transferring what they learn on the race track to their production cars. And I believe this becomes the modern-day benchmark of how a manufacturer uses the American Le Mans Series’ platform to develop and showcase new technology that is destined for road-car application. This car truly offers a glimpse into the future of high-performance road car technology.”
The distinctive aspect of Porsche’s hybrid technology features an electric flywheel power generator located in the cockpit beside the driver that has the advantage of storing and delivering high amounts of energy very quickly. The combination of the combustion engine and electric motor fulfils a simple objective – using less fuel without compromising performance. When overtaking or accelerating, the driver can engage the system by pressing the boost paddle on the steering wheel to send energy from the charged generator.
Because the ACO (sanctioning body for Le Mans racing) has not yet created rules for hybrid technology in production-based cars, the Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid will race unclassified at Petit Le Mans.
Petit Le MansThe American Le Mans Series has achieved the distinction of being the Global Leading of Green Racing by providing a platform that encourages manufacturers to showcase leading-edge, relevant technologies and requiring all vehicles that compete in the world’s leading sports car series to utilize an alternative fuel or energy source. At Petit Le Mans, five different types of alternative energy sources will be raced: clean diesel, E10, cellulosic E85, isobutanol and electric hybrid.
The U.S. Department of Transportation and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, along with SAE International, have cited the American Le Mans Series presented by Tequila Patrón as the only motorsport series to meet its green protocols. In recognition of that achievement, the groups have created a Green Challenge™ award to a prototype and GT (Grand Touring) manufacturer at season’s end. Michelin, meanwhile, has extended the award – the MICHELIN® GREEN X® Challenge Award – to teams on a race-by-race basis. The award goes to the teams that demonstrate not only the best overall performance but also the most efficient use of fuel and least amount of carbon emissions.
Porsche won the inaugural Green Challenge at Petit Le Mans in 2008 with a Porsche RS Spyder that featured direct fuel injection. In 2009, Porsche and Flying Lizard Motorsports won the event at Petit Le Mans behind an E85-powered Porsche 911 GT3 RSR. Porsche and Flying Lizard also claimed the season-long GT manufacturer and team championships, respectively.
 
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Posted by on July 21, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Porsche People – Porsche Owners Club at El Toro

 
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Posted by on June 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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DREAM PORSCHE

 
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Posted by on June 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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911 GT3 R Hybrid – 24 electrifying hours at the Ring

http://www.youtube.com/v/Vc88fTY7eb4&hl=en&fs=1

“Porsche – The 911 GT3 R Hybrid delivered a storming debut and led until hour 22, when a technical problem brought the fairytale to a premature end. So no laurels this time – but we didn’t plan to rest on them anyway. Bring on 2011!…” This video relives the dramatic events of the 24 Hour Race at the Nürburgring. Although the 911 GT 3 R Hybrid failed to score a sensational victory, it showed the potential of Porsche Intelligent Performance at the ring. For more information click on http://www.porsche.com/intelligent-performance

 
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Posted by on June 17, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Building the Porsche FERDINAND GT3 RS

 
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Posted by on June 16, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Inside Racing – Faces: The Gangs of LeMans

http://www.youtube.com/v/_1XyoWxo_0I&hl=en_US&fs=1
Audi and Peugeot???? …… the duel of the year.

 
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Posted by on June 6, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Porsche TranSport Pickup Truck – concept

Designer Nouphone J. Bansasine knows that Porsche already has a Porsche Panamera sedan, the Cayenne SUV, and a sports car line up. Now comes the time for a new Porsche TranSport!

May 23, 2010 — This concept focus upon for high end market buyer. To achieve the concept strategy, below is his proposal to design the Porsche TransSports Premium Truck to be more power, sophisticated, premium and better handling performance than the rest of the competitors. The ultimate goal is to gain the consumers interest and trust in Porsche.He believes this proposal will achieve not only its estimated growth in the prestigious image statement but also the overall branding of the Porsche quality product. Unlike in the past, the automotive industry is highly sophisticated and technology advanced. As a result, consumers demand more and the automotive industry are challenged with competing for consumers loyalty.
Engine Displacement
1.The engine locates behind the occupants underneath the truck bed..
2.Front hood will be used for a trunk and available space for gas tank.
3.Transmission locates underneath the truck bed.
4.Combustion Powered is in consideration.
5.Engine flat six
Designer: Nouphone J. Bansasine
Yankodesign 2010 Porsche for Hauling

 

 
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Posted by on May 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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What If Porsche Made a Pickup Truck?

Ever wondered what it might be like to pull a trailer at 120 mph on the German autobahn?
Neither have I, but designer Nouphone J. Bansasine apparently has. He’s created a new vehicle idea for Porsche’s lineup: a pickup truck.It’s called the Porsche TranSport Truck, and it’s supposed to be the ultimate fusion of luxury and load-carrying capability.

Bansasine figures that since Porsche is selling SUVs and recently added a four-door sport sedan, why not a pickup, too? We’ll let you answer that question. Maybe Porsche could base it off the VW Amarok? In the meantime, we’re going to imagine hitting the Nürburgring after the next trip to Home Depot.

Porsche Pickup Truck Rendering

Porsche Pickup Truck Rendering

I’m sure it would come with lots of cool tech; air lift suspention, paddle shift 6 speed etc, an all wheel drive system close to what the SUV has.

I wouldn’t buy one, but I bet there is people out there who would.

[Source: Bit Rebels]

via news.pickuptrucks.com

 

 
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Posted by on May 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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$180,000 Porsche goes through a garage door! – Reporter’s son crashes Porsche

Photo Credits:
Peter Cheney/The Globe and Mail

Peter Cheney’s son drove a $180,000 Porsche through the garage door while attempting to check out the stereo. Take an expensive sports car, a curious teen and a garage door – and mix together to get one very embarrassed automotive writer

Peter Cheney
Globe and Mail
Some moments are lived backwards. The great ones run through your mind like a favourite movie. Then there are the other kind, where you try to roll back the clock – like the afternoon my teenage son launched a brand new Porsche Turbo through our garage door.
So far, I have not managed to invent a time machine, go back, and snatch the key from his hands (and in case you were wondering, the car goes for $180,000, not including freight, tax or a new garage).
That day began with deceptive perfection. I woke up in a sunlit bedroom next to my beautiful wife. We had celebrated 26 years of marriage just the day before. Our cherry tree was in full blossom, and in the garage, locked away like a crown jewel, was a 2010 Porsche 997 Turbo, the latest (and costliest) in a long series of test cars.
When I decided to transition into automotive journalism after more than two and a half decades of news reporting, no one was happier than my son Will. Instead of telling his friends his dad was in Afghanistan (or at a murder scene) he could bring them over to check out the latest ride.
My new trade did have its perils, which include the creeping cynicism of the professional test driver. An auto journalist’s existence is like a mechanized version of Hugh Hefner’s – when you are presented with an endless cavalcade of automotive beauties, you can easily become jaded.
Now I had the Turbo, the car that every driving aficionado and pension raider dreams of – 500 horsepower, leather-lined cockpit and a 330 km/h top end. Until I drove it, I’d been a little skeptical – I’d seen too many Turbos employed as male enhancement devices by hobbit-looking accountants who couldn’t even drive a stick shift.
But the previous day, I had taken it to Mosport racetrack for a high-speed lapping session where it inhaled other cars like so many insects – when they saw the Turbo in their mirror, most simply pulled over to let us pass, acknowledging the Porsche as the alpha car.

I was experiencing the acme of German engineering. The Turbo had launched me up Mosport’s kinked back straightaway at more than 250 km/h, then purred back to the city through rush hour traffic, as though it had been magically converted from a race car into a Honda Civic. Best of all, my Turbo was a purist’s model, with a six-speed manual transmission – a factor that would play a key role in the events that were about to unfold.
It was early afternoon. Will had just returned from summer job hunting, accompanied by a friend. I was in my home office, writing and looking out at the green park in front of our house. That morning, Will and I had appeared together in a Globe Drive column called A Hockey Dad’s Last Ride that commemorated his 14 years in minor hockey.

Will stuck his head into the office and asked me if he could show his buddy the Turbo. I told him to go ahead. He and his friends always checked out my cars. Their main focus seemed to be the interior and stereo systems – details I barely cared about.
I went back to my computer. My car buddies knew I’d been at the track with the Turbo, and they wanted my verdict. I told one it was like a tiger in an Armani suit – killer chassis, unbeatable power, but suave and comfortable, too.
I shut down my computer and prepared to head to the office, smiling at the thought of a few minutes in the Turbo. As I headed out the back door, I saw my son running toward the house. His eyes were the size of dinner plates. He sputtered: “Dad, the Porsche … the Porsche …”
I thought the Turbo had been stolen. Our garage has a full security system, but this is one of the most desirable cars in the world, so you never know. Will tried to speak again. “The Turbo rolled into the door….” I walked past him into the garage.
For nearly a minute, I was too dumbfounded to speak. The Turbo hadn’t rolled into the door – it had launched itself through the entire structure. In a distance of approximately four feet, the Turbo had developed enough kinetic energy to blow the entire door apart. Parts of the roller mechanism were scattered through the alley. Dazed, I picked up a bent metal piece – it looked like a Crazy Bone, a toy Will had collected as a little boy.
When I parked it, the Turbo had been pristine. Now it looked like the car from Dukes of Hazzard after a chase through the southern backwoods. Stunned, I surveyed the damage. The hood was raked with gouges, the top of the right front fender was flattened, and the driver’s door (which is made from aluminum to save weight) had taken a beating. Worst of all was the rear fender, which had hit the concrete door frame as the Turbo launched itself into the alley – it looked like a giant blacksmith had smacked it with a sledge hammer.
Like a man surfacing from a deep dive, I slowly returned to reality. I yelled at my son for a minute or two. Then it was time to make some phone calls. Will stood in the garage, quaking. I dialled Rick Bye, a professional race driver who manages the Porsche press fleet. The day before, he had been with me in the Turbo at Mosport, teaching me the fastest line around the track and making sure I didn’t destroy his car. After decades of racing and dealing with idiot journalists, Mr. Bye has seen almost everything there is to see in the car business. But as he turned the corner into my alley, he was greeted by a new first: the nose of a $180,000 high-performance car projecting halfway into the lane, with a shattered garage door draped over it like a curtain.
Mr. Bye quietly surveyed the scene for a minute. Then he walked over to my son. “Stuff happens,” he said. “We’re glad you’re okay. This is only a car. You don’t need a lecture. You already know.”

Porsche 911 the ultimate everyday supercar

Click here to read Jeremy Cato’s recent review of the Porsche 911 Turbo. His remained unscathed, and was returned intact.

Now Mr. Bye and I were both on our cellphones. He was talking to Porsche’s insurance company. I was trying to find someone who could get the garage door off the Turbo and get my garage closed up for the night – it was filled with mechanic’s tools and my homebuilt airplane project. If we left it open, we’d be picked clean by the morning.
I found three companies that advertised 24-7 emergency service. That was a joke – none of them could come within the next two days. Then I remembered my contractor, Marty Edge. Six years ago, he rebuilt my house. Now he works full time for David Thomson (yes, the one you’re thinking of) on his properties around the world.
Luckily, Marty was in Toronto. An hour later, he was at my garage, along with a door expert named Frank Dyer. The cavalry had arrived. I was starting to feel a little better. Frank used the remains of our ruined door to close up the opening. Will had never used power tools before, but Frank put him to work driving screws.
As the dust settled, my wife and I confronted the parenting issues that attended the disaster. What was the appropriate punishment for a boy who trashes a car worth $180,000? Friends were flooding us with stories of costly child screw-ups – like the son who flushed an action figure down a toilet, creating a deluge that caused more than $100,000 damage to their house. A colleague told me how she damaged her parent’s brand-new van – she got distracted and rear-ended a truck filled with huge stones (driven by two women who were starting a rock garden project.)
I recalled a childhood friend who rolled a bowling ball off a garage roof (it seemed like a good idea at the time) only to have it land on his father’s newly restored Porsche 356. Another had totalled the family Mercedes by taking it out of gear and pulling off the handbrake – he jumped out as the car began to roll, and watched helplessly as it headed down their steeply sloped driveway, across the street, and into a ravine.

Peter Cheney test drives a Smart car 

Will’s ride through the door was getting around. I got an e-mail from a partner in a Bay St. communications firm: “Congratulations on your son’s Ferris Bueller moment,” it read. “ It’s all over town. There must be just a touch of parental pride that he has the sense of adventure, the stones, and the good taste to give it a try. That will be a wedding day story. Hope you got photos.”
Ferris Bueller had crossed my mind. There were some obvious parallels to the movie. Like Ferris, my son is a spirited, upbeat boy who loves a good time. And, also like Ferris, his coming-of-age story featured the ruination of an extremely valuable car. He had taken a four-foot, 500 horsepower ride to manhood.
We had a hard call to make. Would it be grounding for life? Let it go? Something in between? Will was a teenage boy. One of the world’s hottest cars had been sitting in our garage, calling to him like the sirens of Homer’s Odyssey. He had a friend to show off for. Will had taken the key, intending to turn on the stereo and navigation system, only to inadvertently fire up an engine that could launch the car to 100 km/h in just over three seconds. He didn’t know how to drive a standard. The outcome had been written in bent metal.
A lawyer friend who has known Will since he was 11 called me at the office. He was laughing so hard that he cried. In his view, Will had made a standard teenage mistake that happened to involve an expensive car. “He’s a great kid,” he said. “Give him a break.”
As I saw it, raising our boy was a lot like training a horse. I didn’t want to break his spirit and turn him into a pit pony. Neither did I want him to become El Diablo. I hoped he would end up as Secretariat – a disciplined champion.
My wife and I decided that Will would have to repay our insurance deductibles and discount losses by getting a summer job. The total would be about $750. Porsche’s deductible on the car was $10,000. I offered to pay it. Mr. Bye said no.
via theglobeandmail.com

Posted via web from dedeporsche’s posterous
 
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Posted by on May 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Royal Falcon Fire 28 by PORSCHE DESIGN STUDIO

 
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Posted by on May 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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PORSCHE DESIGN – Schmittenhöhebahn Aerial Tramway Cabins Get Porsche Looks – Zell am See, Austria

cable cars for the schmittenhhebahn

Schmittenhöhebahn has a long history of more than four decades to carry millions of visitors in summers and winters from Zell am See, Austria, to Schmittenhöhe. But finally it’s a time to replace its two old red cabins with the latest generation of new cable cars. For that purpose, they partnered with Porsche Design Studio to develop the specifications for the fifth generation of Schmitten aerial tramway cabins thus giving the red cabins new Porsche looks. The cable cars make a captivating impression with their compelling combination of design and function. Two new cabins with the h/b/l: 270/270/430-510 cm dimensions and increased capacity of 45 persons per cabin; 30 persons with bar installed can travel to Schmittenhöhe (2000 meters above sea-level) in just eight minutes.

The other design specifications include a strong focus on safety and a comfortable ride, full-length glazing, extra-wide doors and the latest safety features. And for those fun loving people, one of the cabins has a mobile bar and high-end multimedia system installed so that it can be used for private parties and company events.

cable cars for the schmittenhhebahn
cable cars for the schmittenhhebahn

Via: Porsche-design / Isr544004

 
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Posted by on May 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Exotic Supercars San Francisco Bay Area – Hwy 92, San Mateo Bridge,cruising the Northern California Backroads

 
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Posted by on May 8, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Porsche Cayenne and Porsche 911 Turbo driving on Icelandic glacier

http://www.youtube.com/v/myJvy_o0rrg&hl=en&fs=1

Porsche Cayenne and Porsche 911 Turbo driving on Icelandic glacier. This is probably a world record and one of the most interesting footage of what Porsche is capable of doing. The conditions were excellent to perform such a stunt but with combination’s of world class driver with decades of experience this was completed successfully. The driver a stunt man is Benedikt Eyjolfsson the owner of Porsche importer in Iceland along with other driving experts.

 
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Posted by on May 5, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Interview with Jorg Bergmeister for Renntrack.com

http://www.youtube.com/v/RNiUQ2TEnKU&hl=en&fs=1

April 28, 2010 — Renntrack.com interview with Jorg Bergmeister inside the Flying Lizard rig at the 2010 Long Beach Grand prix.

 
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Posted by on May 2, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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The Last Eleven; the first Porsche Gmünd 356SL Factory Race Cars

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http://www.youtube.com/v/ta5EXT8qQb0&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0x3a3a3a&color2=0x999999&hd=1&border=1

The Last Eleven
 Philip Carney & Jacques Mertens
NEW! Covers the 11 special-bodied Gmünd Coupes assembled by Porsche as its first factory race, rally, and record-setting cars, which provided the first Porsche factory entries at Le Mans in 1951. Describes competition development via enhanced aerodynamics, weight savings, powerplant improvements. Detailed histories of each chassis–356/2-05 to 356/2-063–use information and very rare photographs gleaned over many years. Foreword by Karl Ludvigsen. Hardbound, 10×8-inches, 98 pages.  (European and Japanese residents, order via jacques-mertens@skynet.be)

Timeline for the 356

Here’s a very rough timeline of the development of the 356, compiled from a variety of sources. “Driving in it’s Purest Form”, “Excellence was Expected”, “Speedster” and “Porsche : 356 & Rs Spyders” are all recommended for the Porsche 356 enthusiast and those interested in the Porsche history 1948-1966. See also the Porsche North America corporate website from which much of the below material came. The student of Porsche and 356 history is strongly encouraged to seek out the above books for a detailed history of the car, the company and the amazing individuals who brought us the 356.

1948: Gmünd, Austria. The Porsche Firm, having located to Austria just after the war to be closer to parts suppliers, turns out a variety of automotive, farm and industrial motors and tools for the war-ravaged western europe. Ferry Porsche (son of the famous Dr. Ing Ferdinand Porsche, founder of Porsche motors) designed and fabricates the first Project #356 car, model 356-001. The car utilized a tubular chassis, an 1100cc engine and was very light and so quick for the time. Karl Frolich was the gearbox and suspension specialist contributing to the handling of the prototype. Ferry Porsche often took the prototype–sometimes just the rolling chassis without body–up the steep mountain roads surrounding Gmünd and found the car a spright handler and good climber.
The body of the car was designed by Irwin Komenda. Kommenda, an Austrian born in 1904, contributed substantially to the Volkswagen, Cistalia, Auto Union racers and other cars of the day. Though the car changed from mid-engine to rear, the tubular chassis gave way to a unitized pan and body construction, and a myriad of details evolved over the 22 year run of the model, the overall design and instantly recognizeable shape of the car remained the same, a timeless classic. Komenda joined Porsche’s design bureau in 1931 after positions at Steyr and Daimler-Benz and other coach shops in Austria and Germany. Komenda contributed to many other designs in Porsche’s history and was the chief engineer and head of Porsche’s coach werk from 1955 until his death in 1966.
Karl Peter-Rabe was the “confidential clerk” for Porsche, and became the chief business manager, after Prizing, until 1965. Dr. Ing Albert Prizing was a business manager who brought 37 orders back to the factory after one importer’s conference in Wolfsberg in 1950.
The original 356-001 car is raced at the Innsbruck city race, achieiving a victory in the 1100cc class in its first outing. Porsche was homologated by the state government of Kärnten in Austria on 8 June 1948. Above and below photos courtesy of the Porsche archives. The original Porsche “001” car is in the Factory Meuseum and frequently tours the world for special car shows and historic events.

Over 50 Gmünd cars are built and sold primarily in Austria and Germany. Many still survive in US and other collections around the world.

1949: The first 356 Cabriolet is built. The Gmünd cars are alloy aluminum.

1950: The factory relocates to Zuffenhausen, next to the Reutter coachwerks and begins production on the 356. This run will continue to 1965, and produce nearly 80,000 cars. Cars are produced by other coachbuilders as well, namely Gläser.


A 1951 “split windshield” 356 Cabriolet. Porsche 356es made prior to 1955 are sometimes called “Pre-A”, as the model took on the letter predicate at that time.

1951: Porsche 356 technical innovations continue. The 1.3 liter motor has chrome plated aluminum cylinders and the world’s first synchromesh transmission. Porsche 356-002 wins at LeMans in the 1100cc class. The “Old Professor”, Dr. Ing Ferdinand Porsche, Sr. dies at 75. Porsche KG employs 1400 people as Ferry Porsche leads the company.

1952: The 1500 “Super” engine is introduced (1488 cc, 70hp DIN)
1953: In a deal with Max Hoffman, of New York, Porsche introduces the 356 to the United States. Soon Hoffman makes arrangements with select foriegn auto dealers around the country to carry the Porsche cars. Hoffman acts as sole US importer. Split windshields give way to bent windshields.
1954: Hoffman urges Porsche to make a less-expensive “stripped-down” model of it’s open car for the West Coast. Fair weather, a cruising scene and lots of amateur racing make the “Speedster” a success, a staple production for the next 5 years. Over 4100 Speedsters will be sold by 1959.
1955: The 1600 motor is in production. The 1500 GS Type 547 Carrera motor is in development for racing and finds its way into the 356 production line. The “A” version of the 356 model is introduced. Numerous subtle differences in the shape of the body and features of the care are introduced. Almost half the cars sold are open cars: cabriolets and Speedsters. The “A” models are named internally at “Type 1”, and thereafter known by enthusiasts as “T-1” cars.
1956: The 10,000th 356 Rolls off the assembly line. Pictured below with Ferry Porsche.

1957: More improvements to the 356A results in a new project, the Type 2, or “T-2”. A new transmission, the 644 replaces the earlier 519 with improved shifter, a split case design, dual nose mounts and better synchros.
1958: Continued improvements in the Carrera engines yield higher horsepower. Production begins on the “Convertible D”, a replacement for the Speedster. The “D” is made by Drauz factory, and the car is between a Speedster and a Cabriolet in luxury and lightweight appointments. Most noticeable are the roll-up windows and a taller, but still “removeable” windscreen.
1959: The last Speedster is made. The 1300 engine is dropped from the line. In the fall a new model, the Type-5 (T-5), 356B is introduced. The Convertible D becomes the Roadster with the new T-5 body style.
1960: The 356B gets the “Super 90” (S90) motor as an option, with a counterweighted crank, sodium-filled valves and Solex P40-II carburetors.
1961: The Karmann Coachwerks is employed to make the “Hardtop”, which is a Cabriolet body with a fixed hard roof. This profile gives the car the knickname “Notchback”. Nearly 1750 of these cars will be made over two years’ production
1962: Karmann makes 2170 coupes along with the 4100 made by Reutter. Along with almost 1600 Cabriolets, production tops 7900 for the year. Porsche begins discussion with Reutter to purchase the coachmaker and finally completely consolidate the successes of 12 years of co-operation. The factory launches “Christophorus”, a customer magazine of news and background on the Porsche lifestyle.
1963: The 356C, known as the Type 6 (T-6) is introduced, along with the SC engine with 95hp. The “C” has 4-wheel disc brakes, and an optional 12-volt electric system. The optional “Carrera 2” motor develops 130 DIN hosepower.
1964: 356 Production reaches a high of over 10,000 in a single year, more than the entire line production of the first 10 years of the Porsche 356. The factory introduces the 911 model, presaging the end of the 356 line.
1966: The last 10 356 Cabriolets run off the production line in this calendar year, finishing the 1965 model year run. The 4-cylinder Carrera engines contiune racing in the successful 904 model. Total production run: more than 78,000. About 1/2 of the entire production are believed to exist today.

 

  

  










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Posted by on May 2, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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The 50+ Greatest Automotive Quotes of all Time.


Here is a listing of some of the greatest quotes as they pertain to the automobile industry and racing.Also included are the photos of those who said them as well… who knows, maybe their pictures will give you a little insight as to the reasons why they said what they said. Either way though there are some kickers in there, so start reading and enjoy.
We all love famous quotes don’t we? Little snippets of verbiage that for whatever the reasons, are so profound that they stay with us forever.
Some, like Neil Armstrong’s famous moon landing quote have made history: That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.
Others, like the beauties from Yogi Berra of the New York Yankees have just made us laugh and wonder: You can observe a lot just by watching or Baseball is 90% mental — the other half is physical…?


1. To finish first, you must first finish. Rick Mears
2. Nobody remembers the guy who finished second but the guy who finished second.Bobby Unser
3. The winner ain’t the one with the fastest car, it’s the one who refuses to lose. Dale Earnhardt

4. You win some, you lose some, you wreck some. – Dale Ernhardt Sr.
5. Aerodynamics are for people who can’t build engines.Enzo Ferrari
6. The client is not always right.Enzo Ferrari

7. If you think the last 4 words of the national anthem are gentlemen, start your engines, you might be a redneck.Jeff Foxworthy.

8. Need to tie some kerosene rags around his ankles so the ants don’t eat his candy #$@
Dale Earnhardt speaking of Mark Martin.
9. The lead car is absolutely unique, except for the one behind it which is identical.F1 commentator Murray Walker.

10. Turbochargers are for people who cant build engines.Keith Duckworth
11. Here Kitty Kitty Kitty! Tony Stewart
12. We broke something, I think it was traction…Carl Edwards after getting spun out by Dale Jr. at Michigan

13. Auto racing, bull fighting, and mountain climbing are the only real sports… all the others are games.Ernest Hemingway
14. Calling upon my years of experience, I froze at the controls.Stirling Moss
15. Faster, faster, faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death…Hunter Thompson

16. I don’t know driving in another way which isn’t risky. Each one has to improve himself. Each driver has its limit. My limit is a little bit further than other’s. Ayrton Senna
17. It is amazing how may drivers, even at the Formula One Level, think that the brakes are for slowing the car down.Mario Andretti
18. Once you’ve raced, you never forget it…and you never get over it. Richard Childress

19. Race cars are neither beautiful nor ugly. They become beautiful when they win.Enzo Ferrari

20. There’s no secret. You just press the accelerator to the floor and steer left.
Bill Vukovich

21. To achieve anything in this game you must be prepare to dabble in the boundary of disaster.
Sterling Moss

22. To achieve anything in this game you must be prepare to dabble in the boundary of disaster.Sterling Moss
23. What’s behind you doesn’t matter.Enzo Ferrari
24. When you win a race your on top that day, so take it for what its worth, have a good time and party, cause the next day when you get out of bed, the meter goes back to zero again. Bobby Allison

25. No, no, he didn’t slam you, he didn’t bump you, he didn’t nudge you… he *rubbed* you. And rubbin, son, is racin’.Harry Hogge, Days of Thunder
26. If you can leave two black stripes from the exit of one corner to the braking 
zone of the next, you have enough horsepower. – Mark Donohue
27. If you’re in control, you’re not going fast enough.Parnelli Jones

28. Mr. Bentley – He builds fast trucks.Ettore Bugatti
29. Why worry about death, it’ll come sooner or later. Jim Dunn
30. Speed has never killed anyone, suddenly becoming stationary… that’s what gets you. Jeremy Clarkson

31. Auto racing began 5 minutes after the second car was built. Henry Ford
32. As far as cheating goes, they’ll never stop it. The only way it can be done successfully, only one person can know about it.Smokey Yunick
33. It’s like flying jet fighters in a gymnasium Dick Trickle was asked what racing at Windchester Speedway was like.

34. You can’t fix stupid Larry Morgan, NHRA Pro Stock driver
35. You can tell that you’re in trouble when you feel the air on the back of your neck instead of in your face. Buddy Baker
36. I got hit in the head pretty hard. My clock ran backwards for two years. – Buddy Baker

37. He ran out of talent about halfway through the corner.Buddy Baker
38. After the third flip, I lost control………… Don Roberts after crashing in the Jade Grenade at New England Dragway in 1975.
39. We worked 80 hour weeks for 30 years to keep from having to get a real job.Tom Lemon’s comment on the rigors of being a drag racing.

40. It’s basically the same, just darker. Alan Kulwicki, on racing Saturday nights as opposed to Sunday afternoons.
41. Auto racing is boring except when a car is going at least 172 miles per hour upside down. Dave Barry
42. If someone said to me that you can have three wishes, my first would have been to get into racing, my second to be in Formula 1, my third to drive for Ferrari.Gilles Villeneuve

43. There are seven winners of the Monaco Grand Prix on the starting line today, and four of them are Michael Schumacher.Murray Walker
44. When I raced a car last it was at a time when sex was safe and racing was dangerous. Now, it’s the other way round. Hans Stuck
45. I love this kind of racing, (but) these guys sure change their personalities in race mode. They’re like Doberman Pinschers with a hand grenade in their mouths. – Road racer Boris Said speaking of NEXTEL Cup drivers.

46. The crashes people remember, but drivers remember the near misses.Mario Andretti
47. When I started racing my father told me, ‘Cristiano, nobody has three balls but some people have two very good ones. Cristiano Da Matta
48. Moonshiners put more time, energy, thought, and love into their cars than any racer ever will. Lose on the track, and you go home. Lose with a load of whiskey, and you go to jail. Junior Johnson, NASCAR legend, and one time whiskey runner.

49. There have been other tracks that separated the men from the boys. This is the track that will separate the brave from the weak after the boys are gone. – Driver Jimmy Thompson speaking about Daytona International Speedway.
50. Winning is everything. The only ones who remember you when you come second are your wife and your dog. Damon Hill

http://www.juliasantengallery.com/php/getthumb.php?refnum=1764

51. “Racing Is Life. Anything That Happens Before or After
is Just Waiting.”…
The headline quote is a favorite line from
Steve McQueen’s character in the movie Le Mans. It sums up well my
current state of mind.
https://i0.wp.com/www.petersen.org/imgs/carroll_shelby.jpg

52. “Thank god there’s no 48-hour race anywhere in the world,
because chances are nobody could beat Porsche in a 48 hour race.
They’re probably the only cars in the world that would stand up for
something like that.”
– Carroll Shelby, quoted in Porsche
advertising brochure, 1972.

Posted via web from dedeporsche’s posterous
 
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Posted by on April 29, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Porsche, There Is No Substitute – Risky Business

Warner Bros. film – “Risky Business” a 1983 teen comedy-drama film written by Paul Brickman. It is best known for being the film that launched Tom Cruise to stardom.

http://www.youtube.com/v/j6UJZtCz1-c&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0x3a3a3a&color2=0x999999&hd=1&border=1

Joel Goodson (Tom Cruise) is a tame high school student who lives with his wealthy parents in the North Shore area of suburban Chicago. His father wants him to attend Princeton University, his alma mater, so Joel participates in Future Enterprise’s, an extracurricular activity in which students work in teams to create small businesses. When his parents go away on a trip, Joel’s friend Miles (Curtis Armstrong) convinces him to take advantage of his new found freedom by having some fun.

http://d.yimg.com/static.video.yahoo.com/yep/YV_YEP.swf?ver=2.2.46

On the first night, he raids the liquor cabinet, plays the stereo loudly, and dances around the living room in his underwear and pink dress shirt to the tune of “Old Time Rock and Roll”. Another night, he races his father’s Porsche 928, despite his parents’ explicit instruction to drive only his mother’s car.Tom Cruise breaks it down in Risky business… showin’ the ladies how to work it….dances around the living room in his underwear and pink dress shirt to the tune of “Old Time Rock and Roll”.

http://www.youtube.com/v/G2UVsyVLLcE&hl=en_US&fs=1&color1=0x3a3a3a&color2=0x999999&hd=1&border=1

Quest for “Risky Business” 928 Porsche

http://www.webridestv.com/xml/wbuserembedplayer.swf?movieid=23027

 

 
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Posted by on April 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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Porsche Motorsport – POC El Toro Airbase Road Course 2010

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf

Video of the Porsche Owner’s Club at the Orange County Great Park – Old El Toro Marine Airstrip on March 13th & 14th, 2010. This is a professionally designed 2.14 mile high-speed road course with 15 corners, elevation changes, and painted curbing. The track is smooth and clean, minimizing rock chips! Racing through the heart of Orange County without getting a speeding ticket!
PORSCHE OWNERS CLUB

 

 
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Posted by on April 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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From Road to Sky: The Porsche FlugMotoren, Auto Engines that Fly

Paris Barn find, Restoration of Porsche 917-024 movie "Le Mans"

The story goes that 917K chassis #024 was put into storage post filming for the Le Mans movie and there it stayed, not forgetting they had little or no value in 1972/73 after 5 litre cars were banned

Paris Barn find, Restoration of Porsche 917-024 movie “Le Mans”

917 FOUND IN A BARN…

The Porsche 917-024: this car is found in a granary near Paris after ca. 30 years (?????).
This car was only in Le Mans Test Weekend in April 1970 and was a film-car (one of a few film-cars) in movie “24.Heures of Le Mans” with Steve Mc Queen.

Steve McQueen – Le Mans

The car was in Jo Siffert-collection in this time.
And it is found near Paris (in a granary!!!!) by an editor from german oldtimer-magazine “Motor Klassik”.

The story goes that 917K chassis #024 was put into storage post filming for the Le Mans movie and there it stayed, not forgetting they had little or no value in 1972/73 after 5 litre cars were banned

Modena Motorsports Langenfield Germany

About the 2001 barn find in the Paris suburbs of 917-024 : German magazine Motor Klassik (March 2002) had an article with pictures of the car as it was found.

It carried number 65 and they still haven’t found out where that came from. It was the home of the “Ratatouille” family that had eaten away most of the electrical wiring and more. It has some Jo Siffert Automobiles / Fribourg stickers on the rear body.
According to my files, chassis 024 ran only at the Le Mans preliminaries in 1970 by Redman and Hailwood when it was white. It has no race history and was used for the Le Mans movie with an engine loaned from Zuffenhausen. The engine returned after the filming, the car disappeared.

The story goes that 917K chassis #024 was put into storage post filming for the Le Mans movie and there it stayed, not forgetting they had little or no value in 1972/73 after 5 litre cars were banned

The story goes that 917K chassis #024 was put into storage post filming for the Le Mans movie and there it stayed, not forgetting they had little or no value in 1972/73 after 5 litre cars were banned

Restoration of the Porsche 917 from the movie “Le Mans”
917 Chassis #24

Picture from: Claudio Polizzi

Restoration of the Porsche 917 from the movie “Le Mans”

Porsche 917-024
Competition Group: 5
Constructed For: Porsche AG
Engine Specification: 4,494cc, 580hp
Ownership History: Porsche AG, Jo Siffert (1970), Solar Productions (1970), Pruir (France)
Competition Highlights: None
Chassis Notes: LONG TAIL 1969 VERSION.

CONVERTED INTO 1970 “K” SPECIFICATIONS. SOLD TO JO SIFFERT. PAINTED IN JOHN WYER-GULF COLORS. BELIEVED TO BE THE SECOND CAR USED FOR FILMING “LE MANS” BY STEVE MCQUEEN. CAR IS NOW IN FRANCE WITHOUT ENGINE AND GEARBOX. SAID TO BE UNDERGOING RESTORATION.

Picture from: Claudio Polizzi

Picture from: Claudio Polizzi

Picture from: Claudio Polizzi

 
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Posted by on April 21, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

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