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Cobalt Cobalt is online now
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 2,315
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Guest3416 View Post
About 40 cars on that pictures. So all accounted for.
I stand corrected.
I still don't believe Singer will make a dent in the number of 964 produced.
I have said quite a bit on the subject and as noted there weren't many coupes imported. Around 5100. (not including the RSA and special WB cars) Most all sources and charts like the one posted are misleading and incorrect. So many were destroyed long before Singer came along. There was a while when some Pelican members were parting out multiple cars at a time and it went on for a long time. I know of a bunch that have had LS1 transplants and around 15 years ago it was the track car of choice many crashed and burned. The real issue isn't Singer as much as all the backdates, RWB conversions in general. Even my own track car which is now a 3.8RSR WB tribute makes me guilty but still looks like a 964 vs a Singer. Singer is just the one who made backdating these popular and many have followed suit both here and elsewhere.

I appreciate their craftsmanship and engineering. The style is not for me but the price I cannot justify. You will easily be into a singer for over $700k and for half that you can contract the best of the best and have IMO an equally good car.

One of the reasons I like the 964 is it is far safer than the older cars. It adds a lot of weight but air bags ABS and crash protection are important and one thing I don't like is their removing the Air bags and bumpers. All your money isn't going to help you in a collision and these cars are far faster than a stock C2. Might as well use the earlier tubs if your not going to use the safety features and I can only imagine what a CF skinned early tub would weigh in at.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Matt Monson View Post
I tend to agree with you, mostly. Singer has bought up all the poorly maintained turds, tips, and the like. They have decimated the project car market. It doesn't exist anymore for 964s. They were just willing to pay more than hobbyists for such things.

That drove up the cost of entry to a nice car a bit, but I don't think it the driving force. I agree with you on the rest about the independence of the 964 market and other reasons why it has appreciated in recent years.
I would credit Singer for putting the 964 in the lime light and in turn this has driven up the price of a nice example. People began to realize that thy were a lot of car for the money. No doubt the rapid escalation of value in the 94 turbos and other early air cooled cars got a lot of attention which got people thinking of the base cars. The real issue I find is the current market. The good cars are in peoples garages and rarely change hands. 8 out of every 10 964's I look at I wouldn't pay you a penny for. I have a friend who sold numerous coupes bound to become Singes and IMO these were far from tired poorly maintained turds. LOL. They also were all manual cars I wish that wasn't the case. They were in need of TLC but cars I would place well above what we see in the market today. As you say finding a project car is a thing of the past. When I found my 90 C4 and paid $10k for it my wife thought I was out of my mind. What I would give for a half dozen just like it now.
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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 02-22-2018, 12:58 PM
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