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1983 Porsche 911 Sc Targa 2-door 3.0l on 2040-cars

US $27,888.00
Year:1983 Mileage:110590
Location:

United States

United States

- Excellent collector condition 1983 Porsche 911 Targa. One of the last SC-s produced from the factory lane( build date is 4/1983!)
 Low mile 2. owner car that is in very good condition both mechanically and cosmetically.  Looks ,more like a 40K mile car ,it really does!

- Rare color combo is  Rubin Red Metallic with black interior .No accident and  no rust on this car. Non smoking car. It has all the books(Maitenance,Owners....) and two keys. New tires just mounted and this Targa drives perfectly. Engine is  clean and strong with no leaks or strange noises . Tranny shifts smoothly like it should. No cracks or covers on dashboard! Targa top is in excellent condition....

- Options from the factory:   
 -M220 Limited slip differential
 -577 heated front windshield(still original)
 -Fuchs Wheels 6x16 and 7x16 (original from the car)


On Feb-12-14 at 15:50:49 PST, seller added the following information:

 WILL HELP WITH SHIPPING ANYWHERE!

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2015 Porsche Cayenne S

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Perhaps not... but that's not necessarily a bad thing. After all, Porsche famously once said they'd never build a diesel, but when they did, it was actually rather stellar.

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Luciano Rupolo is an absolutely fascinating gentleman. He was born in France but spent nearly his entire life in Italy as an auto mechanic running his own shop. His grandfather and father instilled a love of sports cars in him that he carried on by historic racing in Italy for decades. He saw his life-long automotive passion repaid when he found and restored the car that might have been the first Porsche registered for the road.
You can spot in his garage a split-window Corvette, Ferrari 250 GTE and other exotics, but Rupolo's most interesting automotive story concerns his Iso Grifo Competizione (pictured above). The sports coupe was found in the Canary Islands as little more than a shell, but Rupolo got help from a prestigious source for its restoration. The result is a motoring masterpiece.
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Porsche names new motorsport chief

Fri, 11 Jul 2014

Though it may have expanded into crossovers and sedans, Porsche is still a company with racing at its heart. You might even argue that Cayenne and Panamera sales only serve to fund the company's motorsports activities. Competition-spec 911 coupes still make up a large portion of the grid in any GT racing series, and those activities are presided over by the Porsche GT division (separate from its LMP1 program), which has just announced a changing of the guard.
Porsche's GT unit - which is responsible both for racing models like the 911 RSR and road-going models like the 911 GT3 - has until now been steered by Hartmut Kristen (pictured above, left) in his capacity as Vice President of Motorsport at Porsche AG. During his ten-year tenure, Kristen gave birth to the RS Spyder that competed in the American Le Mans Series and the pioneering 911 GT3 R Hybrid. He also fostered what Porsche characterizes as "arguably the most comprehensive youth development program in motor racing" and saw the marque return to Le Mans last year with a dominant 1-2 class victory.
Kristen, now 59 years old, is leaving the German automaker, but will remain an advisor to the company's R&D department. Taking over as VP of Motorsport will be Dr. Frank-Steffen Walliser, who has until now been head of the 918 Spyder project (a responsibility he will continue). Walliser (pictured above, right) was previously Porsche's general manager for motorsport strategies and will now be responsible for Porsche's GT projects on and off the track, while Fritz Enzinger continues at the helm of the LMP1 program in pursuit of better results next year than the 919 Hybrid achieved at Le Mans last month.