1971 Porsche 914-4 Scca Championship Winning Race Car on 2040-cars
Cupertino, California, United States
Vehicle Title:Clear
Trim: Race Car
Make: Porsche
Drive Type: 5 Speed
Model: 914
Mileage: 100
Sub Model: SCCA FP
The famous Chuck Forge SCCA championship winning 914 is for sale. Fully sorted and race ready. Car has only one weekend of time on fresh engine and trans. This car is fully sorted and will put you on the sharp end of the grid. Has held lap records at Laguna Seca, Sears Point, Thunderhill, Fiberbird, and Willow Springs. Has won the Nor Cal SCCA championship in EP and FP multiple times. This was the car to beat on the west coast. This auction is for the car alone, a spares package may be purchased later.
Engine is a full race 1.8L four with Scat crank, Carrillo rods, JE pistons and Elgine cam. Trans is short gears with ZF limited slip and 904 main shaft. Coil over front suspension and full baker fiberglass fenders, hood, rear deck and bumpers. The car comes with all of Chuck's race notes and log books back to the 1970's
Car can run with SCCA, PCA, and some vintage clubs. Humbles 911s at most tracks.
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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.
Porsche 959 Prototype started it all
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The 959 was first developed as a rally car in the early 80s to compete with the likes of the original Audi Sport Quattro S1, Ford RS200 and Lancia Delta S4. But Zuffenhausen soon saw its potential as a production road-going supercar, emerging as a technological marvel to challenge the decidedly linear approach of the Ferrari F40. It still stands as a groundbreaking supercar in its own right, but also lead to the first all-wheel-drive 911 Turbo and set the stage for the Carrera GT and aforementioned 918 Spyder that followed to cap the top of the evolving Porsche range.
This original Gruppe B prototype, which presaged the production 959, packed a 450-horsepower 2.8-liter twin-turbo flat-six into an even sleeker form than the final version that followed. We caught up with it on display as part of a display of 80s German classics, of which this 959 prototype immediately stood out as the pick of the proverbial litter. Check out the hotness in the high-resolution image gallery above.
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