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-   -   Intro: got my dad's 80 SC (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/553301-intro-got-my-dads-80-sc.html)

TimBer 07-14-2010 08:59 PM

Intro: got my dad's 80 SC
 
Hello,
I have been a long time observer from the sidelines of this forum. Mostly, I used the search function to keep tabs on my dad, BLEW911. Sadly, he passed away in May. Here is a youtube video I posted, it has a lot of his old cars: YouTube - Video for dad.
My dad purchased his 1980 911SC in 2004. Originally he was looking for a muscle car, but when one of his friends recommended he drive a 911 he was hooked. We had a lot of fun talking about the 911 and he was always excited to tell me about upgrades and work he'd had done on the car. Two months after he bought it he drove it from Ventura, CA to Albuquerque, NM just to share it with me. He was so excited to teach me all about it. I remember when we were putting the cover under the hood and my wife walked into the garage, "The engine's in the back!" she explained like a little kid who had just discovered something heard of, but seldom seen.
The car that brought him so much happiness and excitement the last 6 years now belongs to me. I'm still a little sad when I drive it, but I couldn't stand the thought of anyone else having it. Last weekend I flew to CA and drove it back to WA in two days. 10 hours one day and 13 the next (horrible traffic in Tacoma). I averaged 24.5 mpg. The car ran terrific. Not a single issue. 1100 miles on I-5 is not very exciting, but I loved every mile. Mostly I thought about my dad, listened to his music, and remembered the significant role cars played in his life. And mine to a lesser extent. I have a lot to learn as a new Porsche owner, but I am very proud to be driving the car my dad loved so much. I have left everything just the way he had it, glasses, maps, gum, sunscreen, notes, etc.
Any advice for a new, relatively young, Porsche 911 SC owner is welcome. Thanks.

Tim

JavaBrewer 07-14-2010 09:09 PM

Welcome Tim and thanks for sharing!

TibetanT 07-14-2010 09:30 PM

Tim:

First and foremost, sorry to hear of your dad's passing and welcome to the Pelican clan.

Your dad's car is beautiful and gets really good gas mileage (24.5 mpg) so it is in very good shape. I also really liked the 1957 BelAir convertible, my dad had a black one back then, and we called it the tank.

Keep all the receipts and records that you can find with regard to parts upgraded, maintenance and start a log book of your own to record all that you will do to keep this great car in good order. Since you travelled 1100 miles up I-5, might be a good time to take a look at an oil change; I usually do mine every 3000 miles (some may say "overkill"). Upon checking any records your dad kept, a valve adjustment, timing set, and general tune-up stuff will be in order sometime in the future. However, by the sounds of it, the car is running in excellent shape right now, so that will be a future project.

Speaking of projects, Wayne's 101 Projects book is a good investment to start with since you will see alot of the 911SC pictures and familiarize yourself with the engine compartment and other components of the fuel injection system (CIS), as well as the Bentley manual and factory workshop manual set at a later time. Of course, this is only if you want to do the work yourself which I believe you do from your inference in writing this thread.

Nothing but the best for the best, so 92 Octane gasoline always to keep her running good. Find some good Carnuba wax to keep her skin looking fine.

Hope this helps. And, once again "Welcome."

Have fun with your car and enjoy every minute of it.SmileWavy

jorian 07-14-2010 09:38 PM

Great post. Very cool - keeping the old man's 911.

ToddM 07-14-2010 10:04 PM

Tim,

Welcome aboard! Great video and great car. You will really learn to enjoy it as your dad it.

WPOZZZ 07-14-2010 10:08 PM

Condolences on the passing of your father. He must be smiling down on you when he sees the smile on your face from driving the sc. Treat her well.

Daviboy 07-14-2010 10:18 PM

Tim,
Sorry to hear of your fathers passing, beautiful tribute video good choice of music, almost brought a tear to my cynical old eye. Take care of his car like you know he would want you to...

crustychief 07-14-2010 10:20 PM

Sorry to hear of your dad, my condolences.
Welcome to the PP forums!
BTW, That was a great video!

twistoffat 07-14-2010 11:06 PM

Sorry for the loss and I´m glad you´re keeping the Targa.
Like the others have said Wayne 101 and a Bentley manual.
Otherwise regular service intervals and fresh oil every annually or every 3000 miles
whichever comes earlier.

jan mekes 07-15-2010 12:06 AM

Hi Tim,

First of all my condolences for your dad passed away. It's great you made a you-tube memory of him!
you're looking so at your dad, the same face. Nice you shared the love for cars with him. I also have a 34 years old son who does share the love for oldies with me. so nice to talk about cars with a soul! I always had classic cars, in the first years i owned a citroen Traction Avant, after that i bought a MG TF 1500 1954 and recently i bought a Porsche 911 SC 1978. I try to teach my son how to fix problems with the cars and i hope later on when i am passed, he will still remember me when driving the MG and the Porsche.

ramonesfreak 07-15-2010 04:16 AM

man you got my eyes all wet watching that video....all those pics along with the jerry soundtrack got to me. sorry about your dad. have fun with the SC. best cars ever

ddinham 07-15-2010 04:47 AM

Welcome aboard Tim. I have not forgotten about you.

Dana

Rot 911 07-15-2010 04:55 AM

Welcome to the board. I'll miss your dad's comments both here and in OT.

WIL84911 07-15-2010 05:12 AM

What a story! My sincere condolences. I'm sure the car will bring you happiness moving forward. And I'm sure most will tell you to just enjoy it like it was meant to.

Jdub 07-15-2010 05:44 AM

Very sorry about your father - what a great gesture to be sure to pass this SC on to you.

The Northwest is a great place to own this car. Plenty of rabid 911 fans plus John Walker here in town. You will have all the support you need.

Post early, post often - welcome to the 'Board!

motorcop 07-15-2010 05:45 AM

First, my condolence's to you and your family on the loss of dad. I lost my mom in October of 2008 and can relate. Judging from the video your dad and I had a lot in common as far as our taste in cars. I also had a 51 Ford and a 57 Chevy. I was also in the market for another muscle car when I stumbled across my 911 cab at an estate sale and caught the "Porsche Bug". Honor your dad by driving that car, listening to his music as you did in the ride home.....I know you will never forget him and every time you fire that beauty up he will be there right next to you.;)

msterling 07-15-2010 05:46 AM

Your first post is a real winner! A heartwarming story that strikes home for me. My father passed away 2.5 yrs ago and most days I drive what was his BMW. Its good to keep a reminder of someone you love and care for it the way they did. I hope you will keep and enjoy your father's 911 for a long time.

nesslar 07-15-2010 06:39 AM

... :( .... :) ...been there...nice car, enjoy it...

KCTarga3.2 07-15-2010 06:43 AM

Tim - great post and thanks for sharing. Nice video, your dad looked like a cool guy. He must have been if he was fan of Porsches and Garcia. Enjoy the car.

PhatRedHead 07-15-2010 06:49 AM

Take care of it like your father would. Drive it like they're meant to be driven

paulgtr 07-15-2010 08:43 AM

nice job. great tribute. enjoy the memories!

NOLAsc 07-15-2010 10:07 AM

Very nice tribute Tim.

You mentioned Albuquerque. Was that Balloon Fiesta? And one shot with the stucco walls reminded me of the Land of Enchantment. (Never been to the northwest, but I sure miss the southwest.)

Any way like you and many others here, I miss my dad too. He didn't have as good of taste in cars as yours, but he was very good at keeping his cars running -- and teaching me to do the same. He helped me rebuild my first 914 engine too long ago for me to admit. Sometimes I wish I could ask him how to do something, how to fix something. Alas, as far as my 911 goes, I'm relegated to posing questions to people who.... who really know what they're talking about: the countless experts here on the Pelican forums.

Enjoy your car and all the memories.

imcarthur 07-15-2010 10:51 AM

Welcome, Tim. Very, very nice tribute to your Dad. And nicer still that you are keeping the car.

Ian

TimBer 07-15-2010 05:17 PM

Thank you all for the warm welcome and your condolences. I have gathered all the receipts I could find. A quick tally revealed $16K in parts and labor over the last 6 years. I'm still looking through his books. I found the Haynes (65-89) book so far. I plan to purchase 101 projects soon unless I find it in his stuff.
You were right about the picture from the balloon fiesta and stucco wall.
One correction, the total trip from CA to WA was 1400 miles. 1100 of it on I-5, San Fernando, CA to Burlington, WA.

Tim

KarlCarrera 07-15-2010 07:16 PM

Tremendous.

Although beautiful, The 911 is the least important item your father left you.

He must have been incredible, I wish more were like him. Strong as a bear, gentle as a lamb

Thought's and prayers to you and your family.

Karl
88 Targa

crater64 07-16-2010 06:01 AM

Beautiful tribute to your father, beautiful car, now in a beautiful part of the country. Welcome to the board and best of luck to you in maintaining and enjoying this honor to his memory.

Ed

GaryR 07-16-2010 06:17 AM

Welcome Tim, really enjoyed the tribute video. Was that a Bultaco you and your father were crossing the stream on? I had several in the early 70's, best dirt bike there was..

TimBer 07-16-2010 07:22 AM

Gary,
I'm not sure what kind of bike that was. It actually belonged to a friend we were visiting in Kernville or somewhere like that. The only bike I remember him owning is the one in the black and white photo.

Tim

Doug&Julie 07-16-2010 08:35 AM

*manly tears*

Nice tribute and welcome to the board. Porsches are special enough on their own, but to have one owned and loved by your father is extra special. Enjoy that car!

rnln 07-16-2010 09:10 AM

Sorry about your dad. Sounds like the 911 is the memory of him. Keep it the way he kept it. If you search about maintenance, this board has almost everything is not everything. First thing I would read about is engine oil, I am using brad penn. Then tranny fuild, and how to shift correctly, to save headache later on. other people can add more, i am sure. Welcome aboard.

72T 07-16-2010 01:04 PM

I inherited my 72 from my Dad when he passed in 1997. Had been in our family since '75. I grew up in that car. From the tribute, it looks like your Dad went way too young, mine too. You have my thoughts and prayers. And it looks like you spent some time at the track together. Us too. My advice? Don't be sad when you drive it, it's a great connection to all your memories. When the top is out of my targa and I'm ripping through an S curve, I can almost see my Dad beside me pushing his foot through the floorboard, looking for the brakes! Hang on Dad, we're still in this together!

TimBer 07-16-2010 09:46 PM

This place is awesome. Thank you all so much for your thoughts and prayers. And for watching the video I made. I took my 2 year old for a drive after work today. He's been asking all week, "ride in the blue car?" It was a pretty tame drive, but we had a lot of fun.
72T, You got it right exactly. My dad taught me to drive in his 1977 Ford F-150. He was hanging on for dear life and stomping the imaginary brake the whole time. He was a nervous wreck the whole time and I wanted to give up. He told me, "If you learn to drive this truck you will be able to drive anything." He was right and it was worth it to him for me to learn to drive in a real automobile.
I actually wanted the truck because it had been so much a part of our lives for so long. My older brother has the truck now. I know he is smiling down as his boys drive his truck and Porsche. The people at the cemetery let us take him to the funeral reception in the back of his Ford. My brother and I in front with my dad's flag-draped casket in the back of his truck listening to "I get around." I will always cherish that memory. I will try to upload a pic, but I'm still figuring that out.
Like I said, you guys are awesome and I look forward to many years on this thread and the adventures to come. Thank you again.

Tim

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1279345485.jpg

ZAMIRZ 07-17-2010 01:53 AM

Great stories Tim, and welcome to the forum.

That truck looks like a nice ride too, and that photo with flag-draped coffin in the back is very moving.

Thanks for sharing.

TimBer 05-16-2020 02:28 PM

Well, its been ten years now since my dad passed. This forum is one of the places I come to feel closer to him. And, I still drive the 1980 Targa regularly. Its hard to believe its been ten years, I cried as much today as I did that day, and many days in between. Anyway, I thought I would share one of his stories:

I got beat a few times in the GTO. It was very fast for the cars that were on the street in the San Fernando Valley then. The early ’60’s was the prime that American Grafitti was based on. The car didn’t have any options on it really. It was light weight for what it was and it was very fast. Of course, I was a real good street racer. But, I did get beat a few times. The two I remember, one I remember the most was a red 1963 Chevy Super Sport Impala with a 409. You reminded me of another one, a Buick that raced me, in fact he beat me pretty good. He had real low gears. While I was accelerating along in second gear he was shifting a couple of times. He had a lower rear axle gear ratio and you could reach your top speed a lot faster. Yeah, he beat me too.

Mainly, the 409 and a big engine 427 Corvette beat me pretty good. But all the other GTO’s and Chevelle’s I don’t recall ever losing to. The later 390 Mustang GT’s were pretty quick, but some cars are just faster than others. Some GTO’s are faster than others. I just ended up with a good one that was fast for what it was I guess. Even guys that had done some work on their cars; my car was still faster than theirs. I used to consistently beat Plymouth Road Runners and Dodge Super Bees and stuff. Of course, they had some real big engine ones – some Hemi ones – that I never ran up against, I’m sure those would have beat me.

This sort of thing has happened to me a couple times. I was on my way to work and at a stop light. It had to be across from Birmingham High School. Sitting at the stop light and a ’65 Mustang GT was next to me. I was aware of it being there, but wasn’t planning on racing it or anything. He revved his motor at me a couple times to get my attention. He was planning on racing, but I was ignoring him. I was probably thinking about something else, but I wasn’t even concerned. The light turned green and he took off and burned rubber. I left too, but I wasn’t racing him. It might have even looked like he was beating me, which couldn’t have ever happened. We got a couple hundred yards and the lights came on behind me. We both got pulled over by the traffic cops. They pulled us over and I wanted to know why. I guess I didn’t get a ticket, but he wanted to give me a ticket for exhibition of speed, which was burning rubber or driving aggressively. He accused us of racing. I told him that if I had been racing I would have been way ahead of him. So I couldn’t possibly have been racing him. I didn’t burn any rubber or anything. And it was all him. I was ignoring him. I’m pretty sure I didn’t get a ticket for that. I learned real early that Mustangs were no challenge so why take a chance.

I remember the night I got the [GTO] I filled it up with gas. All this time I had been trying to burn rubber in my old Ford and breaking things. The next car I had was the Chevy convertible and it had an automatic. The only time it would burn rubber was if you drove through water with it. But it would then because it had a lot of power. It had the hot V8 motor. Anyway, I got this GTO and I took it out and started dumping the clutch and burning rubber with it. It would just do it at will. I had so much fun with it that night. That’s all I did was drive and rev it up and pop the clutch out and fry those back tires. I left black strips everywhere I went. I looked for my friends all night long. For hours I looked for them. I’d drive around, then I’d go back and check their houses. I couldn’t find any of my friends any place. I was just so willing to show the car. I’m pretty sure they didn’t even know I had decided to get it. The next day my friend Dave Cox – his parents had told him I’d been looking for him all night in my new GTO – he was there at like 7 o’clock the next morning waking me up. “That’s your GTO! You got that GTO! Why didn’t you come tell me.” We had a lot of fun with it. I used to loan it to him too.

I loaned it to Dave one time, when he brought it back it wasn’t running very good. He had missed a shift probably and over revved the motor. It turned out he’d bent a push rod. I didn’t know what was wrong with it so I called Uncle Vic who was very good at diagnosing my problems. He knew what I was doing with the car so he could safely assume that it had been driven real hard or something that had caused the problem. That narrowed it down a little bit. I told him my friend had borrowed it and brought it back and it was not running right. He said, “I bet he missed a shift and it has a bent push rod.” The technical term was the valves float and the piston actually hits a valve and the shock goes back and hits the weakest part which is the push rod and it will actually bend it. It turned out that was right.

J-Gel 05-16-2020 08:42 PM

Hey Tim. As a new Pelican, I just read this thread from the start tonight. What a tribute, and what great stories and memories you have of your dad. It's really really special.

I introduced myself here a couple weeks back with a story about inheriting my dads 83' Targa. Being a high schooler when I lost him, I may have "inherited" the car way back then, but for all intents and purposes it was a garage fixture from then until a few months back when I finally decided to pick up where he left off and begin to work on getting it running.

Anyhow, seeing your post now 10 years later, I can't tell you how special it is to me to hear you're still driving the Targa. Almost all of my memories of my dad with our Targa aren't of us cruising but rather of me hanging with him while he worked on it in the garage. Now that I'm finally working towards getting it road worthy, I dream of the day when I'm running around with it, open air, and picturing him riding shotgun with me, just as it sounds you still do today.

These anniversary days and other significant dates will always get to you. Some hit you stronger than others, even as time goes on, and for reasons that aren't always so apparent, as I'm sure you know by now. Next year will mark 20 years that my dad passed. Your post inspired me even more than ever that the time is now to finally finish his project so I can be remembering him out on the open road next year, and 10 years after that..

Take care man. Keep making your dad proud by continuing to enjoy the car. Inbox is open if you ever feel like dropping me a message. Cheers!


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