Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

1985 Porsche 944 on 2040-cars

US $2,900.00
Year:1985 Mileage:106273 Color: Brown
Location:

Memphis, Tennessee, United States

Memphis, Tennessee, United States
Transmission:5speed
Body Type:2door
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:2.5
Fuel Type:Gasoline
VIN: wp0aa094xfn476081 Year: 1985
Number of Cylinders: 4
Make: Porsche
Model: 944
Trim: Base
Options: Sunroof, Cassette Player, Leather Seats
Drive Type: Rear
Power Options: Air Conditioning, Cruise Control, Power Windows
Mileage: 106,273
Exterior Color: Brown
Warranty: None
Condition: Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections. ... 

I have an early 1985 Porsche 944. It runs great it has 106273 miles, and the odometer works. The A/C has been changed to 134A but it is not charged. The car has a slight oil leak at the front, but it is not the front seal. It has new front struts and other front end parts. The wipers don't work, I've changed the relay and it had no effect. That leads me to believe the wiper motor is at fault. The clutch petal feels good other than at times it won't come all the way back up. If you touch the back of the petal it springs back up quickly. The clutch master cylinder might e at fault and they are about $30.00. I believe the wheels are BBS. The front fenders both have slight dents that are hardly noticeable. The sunroof works, but doesn't latch at the back when closed, however it doesn't leak. The front seats need to be recovered, the back seats are fine. All the buttons and switches in the interior work, power windows, mirrors etc. the dash has several cracks but it is covered by a carpeted dash cover. The trunk area has the luggage cover, but it is slow to retract. The spare tire is missing, but the jack is there. The car is really nice paint shines, but up close its easy to tell it was a cheap paint job. The car looks good, runs great, handles perfect and is deceptively fast. Please keep on mind the car is 28 years old and hasn't been restored other than a paint job. Please feel free to ask any questions you have and I will do my best to answer them. Thanks for looking.

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Auto blog

Jack Olsen built one Porsche to do it all

Wed, 23 Jan 2013

Jack Olsen has built himself a lair called the 12-Gauge Garage, and inside that garage he built a lairy Porsche 911 nicknamed Black Beauty II. Although it looks like one of Stuttgart's models from the sixties or seventies, it is actually four decades of 911 gubbins from 1965 to 2000 thrown under one shell: the lightweight body is from 1972, the transaxle from 1977, the brakes from a 1986 Turbo, the engine from 1995, for example. It weighs 2,400 pounds and it's got 272 horsepower to get it going, but it's still a pure Porsche, Olsen saying, "If you stop thinking about what you're doing, it will remind you in very abrupt ways."
Olsen said the real point has been to have one car that does it all, so he does everything in his 911 from neighborhood runs to 7-11 to track racing - he loads the aero bits in the car and bolts them on trackside. And he says he'll never stop tweaking the suspension.
You can watch and hear the rest in Olsen's words in the video below.

'Faster. Farther.' dives into the history of Porsche racing tech

Wed, 07 Aug 2013

No doubt, Porsche has produced some of the best endurance racecars around, such as the turbocharged, slant-nose 935 of the 1970s and the ground-effects-enhanced 956 and 962 of the 1980s. But the company's most famous racecar, its first overall winner at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, was the 917.
The 917 embodied many of Porsche's technological achievements up to that point, such as the company's first 12- and 16-cylinder engines (the flat-16 was never used in competition), fiberglass bodies that implemented early aerodynamic practices and the use of new, exotic materials, such as magnesium and titanium.
The racecar was commissioned by the head of Porsche Motorsports, Ferdinand Piëch, to win overall at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1970, after he realized a loophole in the rules that allowed cars to compete with engines up to five liters in the Sport category if they were also production models. Piëch saw opportunity: the top prototype class was restricted to three liters; the production minimum to compete in Sport was 25 cars. And so, with much effort, Porsche assembled 25 "production" 4.5-liter 917s and had them parked in a neat line for the race inspectors to verify their legitimacy. It didn't take long before people realized the new Porsches were much faster than the prototype racers, with a top speed approaching 250 miles per hour.

Former Porsche boss Wiedeking won't face criminal charges over VW bid

Mon, 28 Apr 2014

Hedge fund managers have been suing Porsche for years now, alleging that the car company lied about its intentions during its failed attempt to take over Volkswagen, a gambit that caused them billion in losses. Over the same period, authorities in Stuttgart built a criminal case against former CEO Wendelin Wiedeking (above, left) and Chief Financial Officer Holger Härter (right), filing charges in December 2012. When those fund plaintiffs lost their most recent court case, one of the dimming lights in the dark and receding tunnel was that the criminal investigation might unearth more evidence about Porsche's actions that could help the plaintiffs in pending litigation.
Bloomberg reports that another light has gone out, though, with a Stuttgart court dismissing the market manipulation case before going to trial because, as a court spokesperson said, "there wasn't enough evidence backing up the charges." When prosecutors get the files back from the court, they have a week to decide to refile, but unless they've been sandbagging evidence that could bolster the case, the only lights at the end of the tunnel will be those welcoming Wiedeking and Härter back to the world of legally unencumbered men.