Pelican Parts
Parts Catalog Accessories Catalog How To Articles Tech Forums
Call Pelican Parts at 888-280-7799
Shopping Cart Cart | Project List | Order Status | Help



Go Back   Pelican Parts Forums > Porsche Forums > Porsche 928 Technical Forum


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Rate Thread
Author
Thread Post New Thread    Reply
Registered
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Near Dallas, Texas
Posts: 55
When a car company is owned by an individual or family, they build cars as they wish to their own desires - resulting often in the best and worse designs, and for Porsche that is the 911. It has always been the 911 back to when Porsche after creating the VW decided he wanted a souped up VW with a custom body - which is what an early Porsche basically was.
Of course, whoever owns a car company can do as they wish...
It is clear they did not really care for the 928. Once the fear of outlawing of rear engines passed with GM releasing the Fiero, it was essentially the end of the 928 in any development with only minor - very minor - changes. For 18 years no substantive change in the body, chassis or interior.
But, then, to Porsche the 928 really is not a Porsche. It was exactly everything a 911 was not and visa versa. Thus, with the 911 out of the water, Porsche to a to-hell-with-that-thing, and just ran out the 928 and 944 series until they were such an old and repeated body style sales fell off.Porsche had been arguing on behalf of and then defending the rear engine, rear wheel combination for decades and stuck with it.
Endlessly more style 911 models over the years -so many now it like trying to count stars in the sky. Wide body, semi-flaired fenders, no flairs, turbo, targa, convertable, slant nose, whale tail... then change the body a bit and also give the 911 names, Boxster, Carrera...
I guess if I owned a car company, I would make the car I wanted to make too.
Where I believe the 928 fits in the history of Porsche and automobiles in general is my contention that the 928 saved the rear engined car, and is what defined Porsche as a supercar in the minds of the public.
Would it have worked as ongoing lines if Porsche had reskinned the 928 and particularly popular 944 series? The probably answer of Porsche was "who cares about those, they are not really Porsche, they were just a necessary concession and diversion."
What if Porsche had but the 944 turbo to the 928? The bore, stroke, heads, rods, pistons identical? The result would have been a 500h horsepower GT 2+2 unlike the world had ever seen in the mid 80s.
Such is the project among all the 928s I now have.
Now having a 928 with the early 4.5 V-16 motor with a turbo, I can comment that such a combination makes for an radically fast muscle car given the generally superior torque and horsepower curve of the 928.
The next step is to replace the 4.5 16V with a 32 valve, 4 cam 5.0 in turbo form and with the modern engine management (TEC 3) in a 1986 1/2 with the dual piston discs, dual clutch plates etc, and to somewhat modify the body on the front with an old aftermarket kit (discontinued) for different headlight profile (hidaway), wider flairs and updated nose, with a tad of flair to the rear fenders, with it already having CUP wheels...
This is the threat Porsche had as a retailiation if their 911 was outlawed - a threat then did not have to execute and instead just dropped front engined models and back to only the 911 in all its forms. Yet I suspect, that although now all of 20 year old designed, that car (a 32 V turbo 928) is a potent as any 4 seater made in the world today - and it was a car Porsche could have off the line in under 30 days as all the components and design work done in the 1/2 928 motor as is the 944 turbo.
It was the 928 and only the 928 that earned Porsche "world's fastest" and a fair number of times. It could have kept doing so if Porsche had cared to do so. Easily with the 944 turbo setup.
Would a turbo charged 32 valve 5.0 928 have been such an incredible supercar?
I should know in about 3 months...

Old 07-26-2005, 04:51 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #21 (permalink)
Registered
 
epbrown's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Central Kentucky
Posts: 3,686
Have you checked out Rennlist? They have several supercharged 928s there, and at least one turbo-charged version. The project that most interest me, though, is a 32-valve car that's been modified to add VarioRam like the 968. This strikes me as the most probable course of evolution for the car had Porsche continued with it.

Emanuel
__________________
"Motorcycles... the cigarettes of transportation." Seth Myers
Old 07-26-2005, 05:44 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #22 (permalink)
Registered
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Near Dallas, Texas
Posts: 55
I have read much of supercharged 928s. A neat set up, but there are drawbacks to superchargers - though also for turbochargers as well. A supercharger is the easiest power up for a 928 and certainly for early ones with lower compression.
I agree with you that the VarioRam is the direction it would have gone. The intakes on 928s essentially are tuned tunnel rams and are one major reason for the excellent torque and horsepower/torque curve. Porsche work on the 911 had lead them to have to find out to max out power from a relatively small, air cooled (loose clearance) motor beyond just hot cams and over caberation - leading to understandings of intake flow, "sonic wave" of intake etc - Development of the 928 is not devoid of earlier developmental work on the 911.

For a while, exotic customizing of 928s was not that rare. Such kits and interests increasingly vanish with time as the car does not have the value for the costs involved. How many body kits remain being offered? Two I can find and the "GREAT" ones are long off the shelf and no longer available.
1/2 turbo style superchargers and to a lesser extend top mounted positive displacement superchargers seem a not-that-rare selection, and have seen a double supercharger set up and twin turbo in photos.
The stroker kits are so ungodly expensive as to just not be realistic to the value or result.
I just aquired an 86 1/2 5 speed with dual disc clutch that was retro fitted by that owner with an early 4.5 for its lower compression and much lower costs when his 32 valve 5.0 bit the dust. He claimed this was his 4th turbocharged 928 project and the most successful - mainly due to adding a TEC-3 engine management system for ignition and the fuel injection. It has a single Garrett turbocharger that he custom plumbed with wastegate of course, a TEC-3 stand alone engine management system and TEC-3 discharge ignition replacing the distributor, and 42# injectors also controlled by the TEC-3. It also came with Porsche CUP wheels. Interior ragged out, needs paint...
It is EXTREMELY powerful in a muscle car sense, enormous pulling power and goes through 1st and 2nd nearly as fast as you can shift - and it has the long gears, not the early low ratios, so that means it is really building speed. It is an incredible car to drive. More accurately, it is the fastest car I have ever driven in my life, and I have had some fast cars. But it also is a muscle car - the only road competent, excellent cornering, extremely stable and great suspension and brakes V-8 muscle car I ever drove - or even knew ever existed.
However, that it is a 16 valve like all mine are bothered me. So I bought a running and supposedly just rebuilt 32 valve 5.0, and with it comes
a custom front end kit that appears to be an old "can't remember the name at the moment" - Gambella? maybe) kit for hideaway headlights, flaired front fenders and a slant nose front. I am hoping to add a "medium wide" set of Clockwork orange rear fenders and side skirts (less radical than the full Clockwork orange which, candidly, I do not care for) and possibly a latter model rear bumper covering, or maybe not. This donor car also has new carpeting and a redyed (black) and virtually pristine interior to go into the 86 1/2.
I am not a "Porsche" person in history. Had hotrods (427 chevy, 440 Mopar, 390 AMX and Boss 351, and such as TR6, Twin turbo Maserati, Alfa Romero GTV 2000. Never was much on the 911, mostly because I always saw them as outrageously prices for what a person got...
Buying a 928 was a think fast lark decision. A person was selling a 1984
automatic with an older full custom body kit, in my wife's favorite color (Corvette yellow - ugh), BBS wheels and clean interior - for $4,000. We both drove it, she wanted it. I was impressed, so bought myself a green '81 5 speed hardtop (not sunroof) with excellent maintenance history by Devek - paid $6,000 which was a bit over priced but in real terms not really as everything was done and redone through the suspension, chassis, motor etc...
Then a parts car, then this 86 1/2 turbo, and finally searching out a custom body kit and good 32 Valve - finding both in a $2,000 buy...
I figure, when done, I will have about $25K in the 86 1/2, counting the donor car and a professional paint job - possibly a bit less actually. It should make a real 500 horsepower (people awfully exaggerate) with real V-8 torque, a 0.31 co-efficient drag and a redline top speed right at 207 mph, with it also likely a high 10 second quarter et car.
I like the 928 because it is a highly stylized, high curb appeal, excellent cornering, thundering muscle car that is perfectly unique. It was only later I began exploring the history of this non-Porsche-like killer Porsche and what such ever existed at all. A curious and significant anomoly in the turmoil of the collision of EPA, DOT and giant corporate manufacturer wars.
And I like interesting or unique cars. Have the shell of a 1958 "Berkley" out back - ahead of its time. A fiberglass and aluminum composite 2 seater micro car powered by a 3 cylinder 2 stroke motor, looking like a tiny 1950s Covette, that weighed all of 600 pounds. Just like looking at it.

My frustation? 928 s, particularly early ones, have many electrical gremlins that disable them. Nearly all do. Merely stating "check fuses, relays and contacts" is of little help as there are "contacts" all over the 928 and in odd places. There is no central info source for solution, though essentially every 928 owner faces exactly the same gremlins.
Beyond all the other benefits, that is a reason I want a stand alone engine management system - that completely bypasses all the Porsche electronics completely in relation to motor operation - nice.
For those grelims - people frustrated that the windows won't go down, a/c won't turn on and the fuel pump won't pump - 928 s are being dismantled at an alarming rate and most 928 s are parked - though the basic 928 motor is good for hundreds of thousands of miles and 928 s do not rust. It is for lack of a horse, the kingdom is lost. For lack of
support to solve simple electrical and electronic problems - minutes to fix IF you know what the fix is - the remaining 928 series Porsche are being slaughtered and their resale valves falling through the floor at an alarming rate (why I am getting them so cheaply...)
Old 07-26-2005, 06:25 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #23 (permalink)
Registered
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Near Dallas, Texas
Posts: 55
I am watching ebay (the great car dumping ground) and numerous German and Porsche used parts suppliers, and it appears about 20 or so 928 s are being dismantled a week, and the 78-79 model is down to virtually worthless in resale, with anything below the 32 valve models dirt cheap and falling fast.
Cars go this way, though. In the early 70s, an early 60s V-12 front engine Ferrari was a couple thousand dollars, (now $100K), early Corvettes were $1,000, GTX 440s were $800, and I recall an Aston Martin DB for $300 in 1968. Within 2 to 3 years, there will be around 2,500 clean, running 928 Porsche left, with 10,000 or so derrelict and semi-derrelict 928s under tarps, in garage corners and in stages of forgotten restoration - and within 5 years they will suddenly be re-discovered as a collectable. About 60% of the 928 remaining fleet will have to be eliminated first - and that is happening now very quickly.

While I think the 911 GT1 is probably the most stunning appearance performance road car ever built - this having nothing to do with it being Porsche - I have just never cared much for the 911 series. Guess that is why I bought a 928, no? A 928 is nothing like a 911 (and visa versa). The basic Carrera and the Boxster are just too dull and conservative an appearance for my tastes. If I spent upper 5 or lower 6 figures on a performance roadster, I want people to think "wow" when they see - or at least I think that when I see it in my driveway.
When the 928 does the "wow" is when you lift the hood. "WOW, now THERE'S a motor!" Actually, the most common reaction of muscle car guys of hot rod American V-8s at a local dragstrip is "holy s---t!" when I show the 928 motor, which they have not seen before. A big Holley on a highriser is dull as dirt compared to an early 928 spider intake or the later 32 valve massive seeming cross rams.
Old 07-26-2005, 06:42 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #24 (permalink)
Targa, Panamera Turbo
 
M.D. Holloway's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 22,366
DFWX: Any thoughts on putting something together for SLIPSTREAM? Or do you feel that it is more focused on 911's? Sure would like to have a lil sump'n in there concerning these Sharks...
__________________
Michael D. Holloway
https://simple.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_D._Holloway
https://5thorderindustry.com/
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=michael+d+holloway&crid=3AWD8RUVY3E2F&sprefix= michael+d+holloway%2Caps%2C136&ref=nb_sb_noss_1
Old 07-26-2005, 06:48 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #25 (permalink)
Registered
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Near Dallas, Texas
Posts: 55
Yes, exactly.
I hope to find time to put together a web site editorial of this in long and short form, and then offering it to all Porsche published magazines. I do not think Porshe folks have some conspiracy against the 928, rather it is a topic not raised.
So this is what happens... A person buys a 928, 944, or 924 and sends off dues to the PCA etc - and then Panorama comes. They bought it on a lark, because fund limited, or because in a younger age they wanted one but could not afford it. They buy an old Porsche hoping it is the thing their dreams and fantasies are made of.
They pour over the pages, trying to find anything about their model - and there is little to nothing. They go to the web site for PCA - little to nothing. They write to the technical section with a gremlim problem - there is not response.
Somewhere along the way, they feel slighted, can't get it going or running, feel all alone and abandoned and disrespected even by Porsche, and park it in disassembled or at least non-running form until their spouse wins in demands to get rid of the damned thing. And love of Porsche turned to a bitter experience.

The reason people buy old Porsches is the motorhead inside them and the dream of ultimately having a car worthy of the cover of a magazine and that people oogle over. To own a PORSCHE!

Porsche and the PCA should feed and cajole that fantasy, as that is what it is all about. And it is where loyalty comes from and where people become willing to shell out the almost obscene prices for Porsche parts and Porsche dealer servicing.
If the subject raised, I believe credit will be given where credit is due to the 928 - as it truly was a glorious piece of Porsche history of daring, innovative brilliant and creativity.
Porsche was technologically ahead when EPA standards hit - and no one but Porsche could have built such as the 928 no matter how hard they tried due to the EPA standards. The 928 motor is not only powerful, but also very efficient - meaning very clean. Porsche saved their beloved 911 by counter attack against GM - building a killer, luxury V-8 muscle car beyond anything GM ever made or came close to building. The 928 blew any GM car away - but then the 928 blew away every production car by anyone.
I love the scene in the Tom Cruise movie (Easy money?) of the garage door opening, the 928 starting and the thrilling music building to it - that is the sensation of a 928. Many, many web sites of 928 owners feature what? "Click here to listen to a sound clip of my 928."
It is not just that my wife's custom bodies 928 turns every male head between age 10 and 60, but it also does so when she starts it up. This aint the sound of a pick up with glass packs or 4-6 cylinder sports car.

Sound matters. The extremely successful new release of the Mustang V-8 (a reskinned 10 year old design)? The did digital recordings of the 427 side oiler in the movie "Bullet" and tuned the exhaust to match.

The 928 is a fantasy car. But, then, all Porsche are. That is the reason, the only reason, anyone buys a Porsche. Because they believe it will return to them more than just the car itself, but a greater worth and self identity beyond the car into their whole life. A lawyer buys a Boxster to demonstrate conservative success and upward mobility...

A person buys an old 928 because that want a very, very fast car that looks and sounds like a very, very fast car and with maximum curb appeal - even most bang for the buck now too.

Yes, I hope to do exactly that, seek publication of a mini-version of my rambling editorial - as actually it is boasting of Porsche, no?
GM has never built anything like a turbo Carrera, but Porsche built a V-8 muscle beyond anything GM ever made. Yet GM had all the money and all the political power - imagine that. A true David and Goliath battle, and Porsche came out on top - over everyone - in the 928. Porsche went from being a cute little Terrier to the Pit Bull of production super cars. And no one saw it coming.
And, hopefully, other semi-left out Porsche owners will follow suit. The time when Porsche offered a truly affordable, fun Porsche (914). Did 912s and 968s just fall off the end of the world? If there is a Porsche bargain out there, it is the 924. I just saw a 924 TURBO, mostly through a restoration, that could not bring $1,000 on ebay. Being lighter, it is faster than a turbo 944.
Less than $1000 for a turbo 924 with 3 times that in new parts included?

Years (many) ago my brother showed up gleaming in his used 924 - he owned a PORSCHE! It had nothing to do with preformance, rather that word "PORSCHE".
There is something terribly, terribly "off" when a turbo 924 sells for 1/4th the price of a same vintage, mega mass produced VW Beetle.

The benefit to Porsche (and Porsche Clubs) to time to time featuring one of their historic greats or high volume selling models is to broaden the base and the perception of how diverse the potential Porsche customer (and membership) field is.
Lastly, it is the 944, 928, 911, 924 and early 911 owners who most tinker with, modify and develop that wonderful love-hate intimacy with their cars and are the true Porsche loyalists - who, therefore, have the most easily hurt feelings if neglected.
If they can not get their old Porsche to run for some little gremlin problem - and this then reduces the value of their Porsche to next to nothing - they will not buy another Porshe the rest of their lives. In there somewhere, a three Boxster and one Carrera buyer was lost, and another company paying Porsche a trademark for for Porsche logo trinkets goes out of business. The car ultimately is dismantled. PCA lost another member...
Ego is at the core of all costly and exotic car sales and nearly every car project. It takes little to feed that ego that also is then a loyalty.

If I RAN either the PCA or any Porsche publication, I would have a page each month dedicated to each model series such as 924, 914, 944, 928, 356 etc, featuring in each the "car of the month" and at least 3 thumbnail photos of 3 more (only for PCA members cars of course), with a couple paragraphs of something wonderful of that series and a tiny print list of half a dozen typical maintenance, fix up and upgrade tips - with advertising slots on the opposing page for parts suppliers, dealerships, repair shops etc.
I would run mini-series or restorations and modification projects. I would do smaller mini updates on some project for each series - and, of course, include earlier vintage 911s definitely in this as well.
This would still leave the bulk of space to new Porsche lines, racing and events news etc. and advertisers in likely much thicker magazines to many more advertisers.

I can not image any Porsche material doing anything but declaring every model Porsche was record breaking, absolutely fabulous, cutting edge, truly unique, completely loveable, wonderful, collectable and a truly car worth having and keeping for which the owner of such model is a vastly important, obviously smart person by such ownership - or am I just wacko?

"It is easiest to be most hurt by who we most love" sort of thing.

Every lower income buyer of outdated or cheap Porsches strives to be wealthy to buy a GT1 or Carrera twin turbo. They envision their car running right along side the GT1 and people marveling at their car in parking lots. Unless they are slighted by Porsche people. Or they dump their own Porsche because they can not solve a $5 electrical fix or afford paying a Porsche dealer $2,500 to do it for them. Left in the cold, feeling belittled even by Porsche people, do they really become indifferent and bitter towards the car, or towards Porsche as in "Porsche is nothing but a pain to own"?

Few other auto publications do this. The late 70s and early 80s pony cars (Firebird, Camero, Mustang...) were absolute junk. No power. Ugly. Fell apart. Worthless junk. Yet not if you read a magazine for Chevy or Ford. They feature these cars. They feature entire restorations to full customization. They will take a boneyard 1984 standard Camero and feature turning it into a show car - or so they declare the end result to be. To a Chevy mag, every Camero was fantastic and still is.
To most Porsche materials, the 928 is an outdated model that was "a bit on the heavy side." End of story. What happened to "fastest production car in the United States?" Where is a photo of the incredible spider intake that has been polished?

As for "there are far more 911 and Boxster owners out there" comments, is that REALLY true? Or are there REALLY more 914, 924, 944, 928 and 968 owners out there - with no particular reason to involve as there is little involvement with them. How many of those models are still out there in the USA? Hundreds of thousands. Look at production numbers. Most have not yet been scrapped - but they are now being scrapped at an increasing rate. Value, of course, is entirely in the mind. Old Porsche are junk or endeared collectables - such as WE define them to be.
The worthless 924? The 924 was a study in agility. Lightweight. 50/50 balance. Low. Sleek. Economical fuel consumption. 125 miles per hour - stock. Can't get $1,000 for a turbo version.

For your comment, yes, that is my goal and this writing on and on is just feeling it out, getting comments so I "get the facts straight" and to make it more focused, less angry at Porsche/PCA, and - certainly - shorter and more to the point. I have wanted to do this for some time. Why?
The 928 really (not just pretend) was defining and decisive in Porsche history and in how people define what a Porsche is today, was a design break through (at least collectively) for the era and remains a truly thundering, potent, modern capable high speed GT few product cars can match to this day.
Old 07-26-2005, 08:25 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #26 (permalink)
 
Targa, Panamera Turbo
 
M.D. Holloway's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 22,366
DFWX - I can get you published. maybe not Pano to start but I can get you into SLIPSTREAM - has about 1500 readers. Its a start...

As far as a monthly column? At present we have a few monthly columns, one is from the pres the other is bard meeting minutes, then their is my column and we have a race column update. I would like to have a monthly tech column and I think a non-911 column would be interesting for sure. You can call it "The Shark Tank" or Swimming With Sharks"! Lets talk about this.

Also, the 3rd Coast 928 Shark Gathering will be held at Marble Falls TX on Sept 23-35. If you go, feel free to write about it and I will publish it.

Check out details at www.mavpca.org . Go to the newsletter tab and see the Aug issue. It should be available today (or in the next few days). Feel free to scan the other issues as well. Let me know what you think.
__________________
Michael D. Holloway
https://simple.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_D._Holloway
https://5thorderindustry.com/
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=michael+d+holloway&crid=3AWD8RUVY3E2F&sprefix= michael+d+holloway%2Caps%2C136&ref=nb_sb_noss_1
Old 07-27-2005, 03:58 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #27 (permalink)
Registered
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 93
The new 928:
http://www2.us.porsche.com/english/usa/news/pressreleases/pag/2005-07-27-2.htm
__________________
John V.
1990 928GT
1980 928 EuroS (GT2-S)
Old 07-27-2005, 10:18 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #28 (permalink)
Registered
 
Cobalt's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 2,294
Garage
I just read most of this and I have to jump in. Regarding the PCA, it is a great organization. Depending on the region there is so much to be offered. The NNJR region is very active with great events and social gatherings. Although you can learn more technical info from these sites there is a lot of knowledgeable people involved locally.

I find my GTS gets great respect and admiration from the local 911 owners and PCA members. I see almost as many articles about the 928 as you read about the 356, 914, 924, 944, 968. Being out of production, these are special interest cars and people want to read about current production.

Someone stated that the 928 was a great supercar. I would call it the greatest GT ever made but not a supercar. My 94 turbo 3.6 had a higher top speed than the 94 GTS and in stock form easily out accelerates it. In fact my Cayenne Turbo can beat the GTS from 60-130 mph which is a truer test of power. Even with a top speed of 178 MPH the 94 turbo was still not the fastest car in the world and with the introduction of cars like the Mclaren F1, F40 etc it was almost impossible for any car manufacturer to strive for this designation for quite some time. The GTS is a grand car. It is one of the most comfortable cars I have owned and I have owned many. It handles well but I can guarantee you if they twin turboed it, it would not be able to handle the extra HP the way my 94 turbo can without major suspension modifications that would destroy the GT ride quality that makes the car so pleasurable to drive. I am running 430BHP and 450 ft pounds of torque in the turbo with simple mods and it is a rocket compared to the GTS. It will out accelerate cars with more HP like the Viper amongst others to the 100 and 125 mark. It is not a drag car and does not fair well 0-60 but more than makes up for it to the higher speeds. It is far more maneuverable and because it is almost 600 pounds less than the GTS it really is more fun to drive fast especially through the twisty back roads.

Someone also stated that with simple mods the GTS can do an 11.9 sec ¼ mile and 190 top end. I wish it was true but that is not the case. It is not cheap or easy to extract but a few more Hp out of these cars without supercharging. Even if you could bring the power up high enough to achieve such tremendous numbers the 5 speed is too slow and awkward to shift fast enough to obtain these numbers even with a short shifter. The GTS will do a comfortable 13 second quarter with some minor mods. To drop it another 1.1 seconds would take considerable work and expense. From a driving experience to bump the power up high enough to achieve such goals will far overpower the cars suspension. The expense involved would be tremendous and it will probably destroy the feel that the car has that makes it the pleasurable car to drive. Even with the PS2’s I recently added and the Bilstein sport suspension and the 50/50 weight distribution the cars weight just works against it plain and simple.

Don’t get me wrong I love the 928 line especially the GTS. I wouldn’t trade it for any other Porsche other than my 94 turbo which I feel is a better sports car not necessarily a better car. However, the 928 line was dying long before the GTS. With poor sales, lack of customer interest and the great expense to build these beauties are what killed off the 928. I recall seeing many a 95 GTS for sale at the local dealerships well into 1997. It is a shame that Porsche had to kill off the 928 but it’s time came and went. Those that are smart enough to pick up a good example can have quite a great car even by today’s standards for a bargain price.

The newer 911’s have been infused with many features that Porsche saved for the 928 line and in many ways the newer 911’s have become more GT’s than true sports cars. The 928 is a car that will always be unique to itself and is a car I plan on keeping and enjoying for many years to come. I think you find if you pull up to a local PCA event you will find many people interested in learning more about these beautiful classics.
__________________
Anthony PCA affiliate '77 member '83 '90 3.8 RS tribute, 91 C4 converted to C2,'93 964 C2, '93 928 GTS M '94 Turbo 3.6, '15 Boxster GTS M,16 GT4,23 Macan GTS,
Gone worth mentioning '71 E '79 SC, '79 built to '74 3.0 RS tribute (2390 # 270 hp), '80 928 euro 5 speed, '74 2.0l 914, '89 944 S2,'04 Cayenne TT '14 boxster, '14 Cayenne GTS 14 Cayman S, 18 Macan GTS many others
Old 08-15-2005, 08:26 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #29 (permalink)
Registered
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Connecticut
Posts: 1,483
DFWX,
I could really throw this into OT...I entirely disagree with the accusations against GM.

That aside: The 928 is awesome, and I'm sure it did help save Porsche in terms of prestige. I'll argue that the 928 brought new prestige and connotations of the marque. This probably sold the 4-cylinder FE cars at a profit for a long time, keeping Porsche in the game.

And as for PCA...I went to an autocross today. I don't have to be a PCA member to run in the PCA-sponsored AX, as some WRX guys were running too. But I want to buy a helmet and join when I turn 18 next month. I saw good friends and great people interested in a common thing: exercising sports cars. From an outsider's POV, I think this is a good side of PCA, as are tech sessions and rallies (from what I've heard).
Old 08-21-2005, 06:33 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #30 (permalink)
Registered
 
racer951y's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: DFW
Posts: 121
Garage
Send a message via AIM to racer951y
I have been a member of the PCA for a few years now.

I like the national club but my local region is full of *******s. That is why I moved my membership to the Maverick region and out of the War Bonnet region. My region just wants to have a little boys club that only a few of the members control and are not very liking of new people in their group.


Oh and Pano is a great rag.
Old 09-05-2005, 09:48 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #31 (permalink)
Registered
 
Racerbvd's Avatar
Value Needed on Project 928: Book

A friend has offered me some of his old books & magazines, among them is the Project 928: A Development History of the Porsche 928 book. I want to pay him for it, and want to be fair. Any idea of a fair price??? BTW, this isn't for sale.

TIA,
__________________
Byron

20+ year PCA member

Many Cool Porsches, Projects& Parts, Vintage BMX bikes too
Old 10-31-2008, 11:33 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #32 (permalink)
 
Registered
 
macreel's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: (the other) WA state
Posts: 220
Thumbs up

racer... If the book is in good condition with a dust jacket, figure
on $200 and up. Less is a steal.


G'luck
__________________
macreel
'79 924 (red)
'84 928S (copper)
Old 10-31-2008, 11:43 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #33 (permalink)
RicerSchnitzzzle
 
N2O-SHARK's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 385
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cobalt View Post
Someone also stated that with simple mods the GTS can do an 11.9 sec ¼ mile and 190 top end. I wish it was true but that is not the case. It is not cheap or easy to extract but a few more Hp out of these cars without supercharging. Even if you could bring the power up high enough to achieve such tremendous numbers the 5 speed is too slow and awkward to shift fast enough to obtain these numbers even with a short shifter.
Agree and disagree...
A GTS with out a power adder will not do an 11.9 sec 1/4 mile. I am pushing over 450RWHP with drag radials and a lot less weight and can only hit mid-low 11's. I've 150+ more HP at the wheels.

On the 5 speed though.. Maybe the GTS is different, but my Euro 5 speed is fast. And in the quarter there are only 2 shifts for most 928s. Depending on your trap speed you might just be tagging 4th gear.


I like that the 928 gets no respect outside of our little club. I always root for the under dag. It keeps parts cheap and allows me to own a couple cars that should be oput of my leage.

On Topic. The PCA events I have been to have been full of nice folks who were interested in the Shark. I saw more of a division between those who shine and those who race.
__________________
'81 Euro 'S' 928 5-Speed 5.0L Hybrid "Ricerschnitzzzle" Wish list: RollBar, New Helmet and driving lessons
Wishes Done: Body kit, seats, No cat, Headers, X, Afterburners, 3" exhaust, short shifter , 17" TT Rims, 250HP N2O, MSD ignition w/retard+rev limit, MSD billet distributor, Accel Coil. 5.0L block, ported heads, JE race springs + .503 "S+" cams
Old 10-31-2008, 01:42 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #34 (permalink)
Registered
 
lizard928s's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 247
I dont really have anything to comment about on regional PCA. However our local PCA has some bad apples in it.

I dont find that they have any disrespect for ANY of the models, as long as you do everything in your power to look after them, or work on them.
I get a fair amount of respect from the local guys (even 911 owners) due to the fact I do all my own work and modify/create things as well. A few of them have commented that they would like me to get a 911, I told them maybe when the prices of them become realistic.

I personally dont get any of the mags as I dont really spend much time and they would simply sit there untouched.
I however fully understand as to why to sharks dont get mentioned all that often. For every 1 928 there are hundreds of 911s/boxsters around. It is a very simple numbers answer. You write for the majority, not minority. Most owners around here are more concerned about there car and not another model.
Old 10-31-2008, 09:15 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #35 (permalink)
Network Native
 
Danglerb's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: SoCal
Posts: 10,349
I don't think the question is how is X club, forum, etc.

Its what are you looking for, and do they offer that specific thing.

I'm thinking about some track events, so I expect to join several groups that organize them. I don't expect to spend a lot of social time with misc Porsche owners though.
Old 10-31-2008, 09:40 PM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #36 (permalink)
Registered
 
S4hounddog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Vancouver, b.c.
Posts: 71
Being a front engined Porsche owner (928 S4 and a 944), I agree that PCA is mostly geared to 911 and Boxter owners but I'm still involved with the club and part of the executive mainly for the social aspect and club events ( tours, autocross and tech nights). There are a handful of 928 owners that are active members in our region (Canada West) we always remind the "others" that Porsche is more than 911's. The true "wrench heads" in the club have a genuine interest and respect for the engineering marvel that the 928 is. Our local publication usually has tech articles on the 928 because we 928 owners write and send in articles to have published. If you don't like the direction your regional PCA is taking, please be active to change it to your liking.

Last edited by S4hounddog; 11-02-2008 at 06:51 AM..
Old 11-02-2008, 06:48 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #37 (permalink)
Freiherr
 
Red Baron's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: New Orleans
Posts: 1,884
The PCA is a Great Club! I attend several track events a year and have also gone to a couple of national events as well as local region sponsored events.

If you don't like how your Region represents the 928, get off your arse and take the flag! Most Regions have a set budget to sponsor at least one yearly event per model 928,924,911,356 etc.) Even if it's a couple of hundred bucks to cover food, you can make it a nice event. We recently did a 928 Dyno Day and Concour that was great with a really nice turn out. Those type events get people to join PCA and when the PCA sees intrest from a certain model (928) they'll give that group more attention.

My 928 is a HUGE hit at the track. People absolutely love the car and it gets as much if not more attention than most cars out there. respect too,, It's funny seeing people react after a run group
__________________
Abby Normal
Old 11-02-2008, 07:09 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #38 (permalink)
Registered
 
Racerbvd's Avatar
Quote:
Originally Posted by macreel View Post
racer... If the book is in good condition with a dust jacket, figure
on $200 and up. Less is a steal.


G'luck


Cool, thats, sorry for the high jack, I thought I was starting a new thread (I hit new thread button)
__________________
Byron

20+ year PCA member

Many Cool Porsches, Projects& Parts, Vintage BMX bikes too
Old 11-02-2008, 08:44 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #39 (permalink)
Cogito Ergo Sum
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 29,791
Garage
Quote:
Originally Posted by racer951y View Post
I have been a member of the PCA for a few years now.

I like the national club but my local region is full of *******s. That is why I moved my membership to the Maverick region and out of the War Bonnet region. My region just wants to have a little boys club that only a few of the members control and are not very liking of new people in their group.


Oh and Pano is a great rag.
Sorry to drag up an old thread but.... I think you need to give the WBR region another try with a more open mind.... I joined in April as probably the youngest member in quite some time (18). Everyone has been very welcoming to me. They let me help with events and stuff... PM me...

Old 10-20-2009, 09:31 AM
  Pelican Parts Catalog | Tech Articles | Promos & Specials    Reply With Quote #40 (permalink)
Reply


 


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:06 PM.


 
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website -    DMCA Registered Agent Contact Page
 

DTO Garage Plus vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.