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Driving cross country in a 47 year old 911.
Planning on driving to some Porsche events this year, what should i check, what tools to take, a "checklist". Asking those that have done long distance drives in a vintage 911. Thanks!
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1973.5 911T ——-1974 914/1.8 |
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We have a thread for that.
![]() http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/945924-what-your-absolute-essential-tools-long-road-trips.html Mark
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1979 911SC Targa |
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Get off my lawn!
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Some of the tools come down to your ability and willingness to try a roadside repair.
I have driven my 35 year old car to 40 states so far and I plan to hit all lower 48. The cell phone and a towing plan like AAA or whatever. I bring a large Tyvic painters overalls that are disposable. Also a can a fix a flat, tire plugs and the compressor and simple hand tools. Also be sure to have a 24 inch piece of string trimmer cord. It is to get the gas flap open in case the pull cable breaks that opens the gas flap breaks. Practice opening the gas flap with the string. Just the common sense stuff mostly from that list above.
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Glen 49 Year member of the Porsche Club of America 1985 911 Carrera; 2017 Macan 1986 El Camino with Fuel Injected 350 Crate Engine My Motto: I will never be too old to have a happy childhood! |
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Quote:
Quote:
Perfect, thanks!
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1973.5 911T ——-1974 914/1.8 Last edited by Artfrombama; 02-11-2020 at 08:57 AM.. |
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All of the above but invest in AAA too. Enjoy the ride!
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/ˈpɔrʃə/ PORSH-ə Fan
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I have found AAA to take forever if you need a tow/gas/etc. If you have cellular data service, Google the closest wrecker service and talk to them on the phone. AAA pays crappy contracted rates so their network is more limited than you think. Someone contracted with AAA will come to get you/help, but they may be much further away than you expect.
I was helping an idiot friend move something recently and he rented and was driving the rental truck. He failed to pay attention to the gas gauge and the Isuzu truck gave zero beeps or idiot light when low on fuel. It just quit on I-10. Rental company and AAA said 2+ hours. I googled someone near the next exit behind us and had gas in 15 minutes.
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1984 ROW Carrera Sunroof Coupe Schieferblau 1982 US SC Targa Moosgrun 1977 US 911S Sunroof Coupe - SOLD |
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A Boxter spare wheel is ideal to carry. Guaranteed to work (compared to a crumbling 40 year old inflatable) and saves you carrying the compressor
oh, and: WD40, gaffer-tape, zipties, gloves (next to a toolbox with spare fanbelt and carjack)
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Regards, Flo / 79 SC streetrod - Frankfurt, Germany Instagram: @elvnmisfit |
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Shake down runs. If you go on a bunch of ~100 mile drives, you’ll be a lot more confident on a 1500mi trip.
Or just go for it. When I bought my car I flew out, made the deal, got an extra fan belt from the PO, pointed the car west, and two days and 1200mi later I was home. It was an adventure and gave me a lot of confidence in the car.
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_______________________________ 1982 911 SC 240,000mi and counting |
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Interested in the Boxster spare. Does it fit in the frunk's spare location? And fits a G-series ok?
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SWB 912 - G50 Carrera - 986 Boxster - 997.2 911 Turbo - 958.2 Cayenne - 9Y3 Cayenne GTS SOLD: 958 Cayenne Turbo S - 997 Carrera 4S - 957 Cayenne Turbo Workshop Coordinator at Ehrlich Motorwerks instagram.com/patrickossenkop ehrlichmotorwerks.com |
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For long trips, I bring the parts that are most likely to fail (relays, starter, CDI, fuel pump) and I throw a little harbor freight jack behind the passenger seat. Having multiple 911s in a convoy allows one of us to run with no spare, leaving room for more tools, and others with longhoods run a full size spare so no one is stuck running a sketchy collapsible. I did fill one up before Rennsport 6 an it held air for a week... I'd still rather avoid using it.
For summer commuting, if I can't fix it with zip ties and tape, the car is going home on a flatbed. FWIW, my collector car insurance (American Modern) was way more useful in regards to towing than AAA. They had a flatbed to me in 15 minutes after AAA quoted two hours.
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-Tony Instagram: @Pablo_the_Porsche | @RuchlosRallye AchtungKraft #002 |
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My post from another thread
Quote:
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SWB 912 - G50 Carrera - 986 Boxster - 997.2 911 Turbo - 958.2 Cayenne - 9Y3 Cayenne GTS SOLD: 958 Cayenne Turbo S - 997 Carrera 4S - 957 Cayenne Turbo Workshop Coordinator at Ehrlich Motorwerks instagram.com/patrickossenkop ehrlichmotorwerks.com Last edited by Mr. Merk; 02-11-2020 at 11:44 AM.. |
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When I bought a 69E in San Francisco and drove it back to Boston, I had a shop go through the car and installed a new alternator a purely preventative measure. I think a quick check-up, like a mini-PPI by a good shop would be good for long trips.
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Tru6 Restoration & Design |
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Good advice I have heard is to not doing any major work or repairs on the car within 600 miles of your trip- gives a good chance to make sure the repair is solid.
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Rutager West 1977 911S Targa Chocolate Brown |
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Agree on the shakedown runs and not going anywhere immediately after any “surgery” on the car. As far as I’m concerned that applies to any machinery old or new, Porsche or not, and regardless of who worked on it. “Stuff Happens.”
I disagree with Luftkuhl about AAA. We (wife and I) have had to use them several times (both separately and collectively) with nothing but good service. For both cars and bikes. A good investment. Get the service which offers relatively unlimited towing. That way you can get the machine home or at least to someplace knowledgeable, not just an off-the wall gas station out in the woods.
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“As new technologies become indistinguishable from magic, and I can no longer tinker, the magic goes away for me.” Last edited by Steam Driver; 02-11-2020 at 04:07 PM.. Reason: Correct iPad-induced typo! |
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I won't let you trash AAA without a challenge. They are not perfect but they have bailed me out well so many times that I cannot let a AAA trashing stand un-challenged. I could fill this thread with examples of my positive experience.
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RGruppe #79 '73 Carrera RS spec 2.7 MFI 00 Saab 95 Aero wagon stick 01 Saab 95 Aero wagon auto 03 Boxster 90 Chevy PU Prerunner....1990 Last edited by dicklague; 02-11-2020 at 07:42 PM.. |
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El Duderino
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I work in an industry where high availability is the name of the game. Other than dumb cockpit errors, making changes right before an event (we need to rush this in before the holiday!) is THE biggest cause of failures. Remember that old saying... “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!” But then last year we fixed an oil leak on my buddy’s car and then did an 800 mile road trip the next week. So I’ll remind you of what my mom always said... “do as I say and not as I do!!!”
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There are those who call me... Tim '83 911 SC 3.0 coupe (NA) You can't buy happiness, but you can buy car parts which is kind of the same thing. Last edited by tirwin; 02-11-2020 at 05:07 PM.. |
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/ˈpɔrʃə/ PORSH-ə Fan
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AAA is good cheap insurance for help - I have it - but don’t let it box you into myopic thinking on how to get out of a jam on the road.
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1984 ROW Carrera Sunroof Coupe Schieferblau 1982 US SC Targa Moosgrun 1977 US 911S Sunroof Coupe - SOLD |
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47 year old fuel lines might concern me
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I would have an extra set of points.
I don't trust the old Bosch CDI, so I would take something like and MSD Streetfire [$175.00]. but it guess you have to know how to wire it too.
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RGruppe #79 '73 Carrera RS spec 2.7 MFI 00 Saab 95 Aero wagon stick 01 Saab 95 Aero wagon auto 03 Boxster 90 Chevy PU Prerunner....1990 |
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AAA is great but also check your classic car insurance, car club memberships, and credit card benefits to see what additional roadside assistance options you may have.
The only tool I have needed on cross country trips was a feeler to set the spark plug gap when it closed up on me. A business card got me close enough to get the car running and get to an auto parts store where I could purchase one.
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Brian Miller - Scottsdale, AZ 1971 Porsche 911 T Targa @targatuesday :: 2005 Ducati Monster S2R :: 2008 Porsche Cayman S |
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