Used 1986 Porsche 911 Turbo Coupe on 2040-cars
Mineral, Virginia, United States
Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:3.3L 3294CC H6 GAS SOHC Turbocharged
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Private Seller
Make: Porsche
Model: 911
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Trim: Turbo Carrera Coupe 2-Door
Options: Sunroof, Leather Seats, CD Player
Drive Type: RWD
Mileage: 57,300
Disability Equipped: No
Exterior Color: Silver
Interior Color: Red
Number of Cylinders: 6
Porsche 911 for Sale
- 2003 porsche 911 turbo coupe 2-door 3.6l
- 2009 porsche 911 carrera
- 2004 911 carrera 4 cabrio,lowmiles,warranty,automatic,newtop,wheels,mintcar,a1 !(US $33,999.00)
- 2010 porsche 911 carrera cabriolet convertible -pdk,bose,nav,xm,bt,chrono,20k mi(US $66,990.00)
- 495hp!+gt3 whls+new clutch+5k exhaust+ecu upgrade+nav+heated seats(US $58,999.00)
- Low miles - 6-speed manual - great condition - loaded - sunroof - financing(US $30,879.00)
Auto Services in Virginia
Whitten Brothers Mazda ★★★★★
West Broad Audi ★★★★★
Watkin`s Garage ★★★★★
Virginia Auto Ctr ★★★★★
Victory Lane Auto Sales ★★★★★
Van`s Garage ★★★★★
Auto blog
Porsche Macan configurator lets you build $110k crossover
Mon, 25 Nov 2013Part of the idea behind the new Porsche Macan is that it's less expensive than its larger sibling, the Cayenne. But with a starting MSRP of $49,900, the base Macan S is actually $300 more expensive than the cheapest Cayenne. That, however, is just the start, as you can see from the online configurator.
As is often the case with German cars in general (Porsches especially), tick the right boxes and you'll soon be leaving that base price behind in a cloud of tire smoke. Start off with the Macan Turbo and you're looking at a base MSRP of $72,300, which is already over twenty grand more than the naturally-aspirated version. But even that soon escalates as the options pile on.
Aurum Metallic paint will set you back $3,120. 21-inch wheels, another $3,300. You'll probably want the air suspension, torque vectoring, the Sport Chrono package, adaptive cruise control and lane-change systems, and those each add over a grand to the price. A Burmester surround sound system is the single most expensive option at $4,290. And if you choose them all - and choose all the optional trim packages - you'll soon be looking at a price in excess of $110,000. That's enough to get you into a Cayenne Turbo... assuming you don't tag on all the options to that one, too.
Porsche 911 RSR in bizarre, terrifying rally crash
Sun, 22 Sep 2013As far as rally crashes go, this one is pretty terrifying. At this month's Hellendoorn Rally, Harry Kleinjan failed to negotiate a turn and drove his Porsche 911 RSR straight into a Jersey barrier, flipping the car into the river.
While it's unclear what caused the accident, German Car Scene notes, "We can see his brakes locking up ahead of the impact, which also ripped both driver's side wheels off, so it may be a case of ill-judged late braking, locking brakes or a jammed throttle." Us? We're betting it might have been bad pace notes. Fortunately for Harry and his co-driver, all indications are that no one was hurt. Check out the videos below to see the spectacular crash for yourself.
Porsche again staring down another $1.8B in hedge fund lawsuits
Wed, 15 May 2013The sequence of events from 2007 that began with Porsche's secret attempt to take over Volkswagen, and instead lead to Porsche being taken over by VW, continues to instigate lawsuits against the Stuttgart sports car manufacturer. A group of hedge funds that suffered over $1 billion in losses sued the car company in New York. Porsche had publicly stated it wasn't trying to buy VW, the hedge funds in question were shorting VW stock, and when Porsche's actual intentions were revealed, the stock shot up and the hedge funds took a beating.
The case was thrown out over the issue of jurisdiction, then appealed, only to see another suit filed on top of that. After that, most of the hedge funds withdrew their claims in New York and Porsche offered a 90-day window to refile in Germany where it is already fighting a number of other suits over the same issue. The hedge funds accepted the offer, refiling in Stuttgart for $1.8 billion in damages. According to Bloomberg, Porsche hasn't commented on the refiling, but as the same plaintiffs are involved, it's safe to assume that the carmaker still feels the case is "unsubstantiated and without merit." It has fared alright so far even in German courts, with two lesser cases against it thrown out last year.