Posts Tagged ‘Porsche 917’

Our Favourite Porsches

Thursday, May 12th, 2011

911 2.7 RS (1973)

Ok, let’s get the obvious one out of the way. This is arguably the all time collectors classic 911 and built for FIA Group 4 homolog­ation. If you are lucky enough to take a ride in one you will be stunned at the lightness and the tactile embrace of the stiffened suspension. I’d like mine in yellow please.

9144 (1970)

The first gener­ation VW collab­or­ation gets more appealing with age. Aimed squarely at the Californian market when it was released, it oozes a west coast style that is strangely inappro­priate off Highway 1. Madly progressive for the time, you have to think of the Alfa Spider duetto and the Karmann Ghia for its antecedents. But that rear end is one of the greatest in the history of car design and eclipsed that of either of them.

917 (1970)

Again, sort of obvious, the 917 in all of its manifest­a­tions is full of bombast, Wagnerian pomp — this 240 MPH racer was scarier than Colonel Kilgore and a Napalm-​​infused dawn. To think that it was actually homologated and some lunatics have driven them on the road is gobsmacking. The original Mulsanne muncher will never be surpassed.

356 B Carrera Abarth Coupé (1960)

This aluminium bodied collab­or­ation with Karlo Abarth managed to retain the signature line of the marque whilst adding something rakishly dynamic and different. It was brave of Herr Porsche to let go of some creative control — and Karl Abarth finally went ahead and commis­sioned ex-​​Bertone designer Franco Scaglione to build the original shells. Scaglione then appar­ently did a moonlight flit and offed with (some of) the money. A German-​​Italian collab­or­ation that ended as badly as that of Il Duce and the Führer. Both pairings left some handsome machinery that were great at their job.

Panamera Turbo (2009)

Ok. We don’t care what Clarkson & Hammond think of this car’s looks. It remains an incredible creation. It is infused with all the values of Porsche’s long history of innov­ation. A friend of ours let us have a blast recently and it drives like a huge, hugely fast 911 that’s loaded up with too many Knoodle. And in our opinion, it is at least as good looking as Aston Martin’s Rapide (from certain angles). If you’re into executive wafters, you will waft more execut­ively in this than anything else out there.

90803 Spyder (1970)

We fell in love with this thing after seeing it fly up the hill at Goodwood. It won the Targo Florio in 1970 and that graphic design is genius. Its average speed around Sicily was 140 KMH — and if you’ve ever seen the twisty roads of that beautiful island, you’ll know how incredible that is. It pushed 350 BHP and it only weighed 545KG fully loaded with fuel. That short wheelbase must have made it drive like a midget demon. Spectacular.

Racing Beauty

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Porsche 917

In its powder blue and orange Gulf livery, it dominated the imagin­ation of fans of motor racing for an entire decade. it also happened to give Porsche their first outright wins of the 24 Heures Du Mans in 1970 and 1971. Superbly fast, powerful and savagely gorgeous, it of course featured as Steve McQueen’s charge in the flawed jewel of motor racing cinema that was 1971’s Le Mans.

Ferrari 250 GTO

See one in the flesh and you under­stand why they command up to $16M. Based on the SWB 250 GT, part of the appeal of the ‘Gran Turismo Omologato’ version is its rarity. Only a total of 39 were ever made in Maranello. The GTO’s curves and propor­tions were dreamed up in house in the Ferrari factory and developed by venerable coach­builder Scaglietti. Automotive engin­eering as high art? We think so.

Tyrrell P34

Tyrrell’s P34 project was intro­duced as a solution to the perennial problem of aerody­namics in F1 racing. This big slick clad wheels were notori­ously troublesome with airflow: so the solution of shrinking the front wheels and adding another row to compensate for loss of grip was come up with by Ken Tyrrell himself. Success in the 1976 season in the hands of Jody Sheckter and Patrick Depaillier was mixed with consternation.  Sheckter, though having won the Swedish Grand Prix in a P34 that year, dismissed the design as a faddish anomaly. The P34 was outrageous, creative and lightning quick. What more could you ask of a race car?

Mercedes 300 SLR

According to Stirling Moss himself, there was no other car on the planet that could have achieved his record breaking time in the 1955 Mille Miglia. Teutonic engin­eering brilliance crossed with Stirling’s fearlessness combined to create the quickest ‘silver arrow’ in racing history. Now safely ensconced in the Mercedes museum in Stuttgart, you would have to control the budget of a large but devel­oping nation to purchase the original.