Porsche 911,
Codename: 964 Carrera 4
The Car from
the Poster
Text and photos: Reinis Babrovskis
On the
day of the photo-shoot Northern Ireland’s weather was at its unpredictable best.
Sunny when I left the house, raining
five miles down the road, followed by snow upon arrival, so by the time I got
out from the car the only thing left the was hailstones. Basically if you have
seen the movie “2012" you know exactly what weather I am on about; so
instead of cancelling the shoot, we decided to do some detail shots in the
garage. As I walked into the garage I noticed an old-skool BMX tucked up in the
far corner, so naturally, I asked the owner for the story behind the bike. I was
promptly shown a photo of hundreds and
hundreds of BMX bikes that used to sit where the Porsche is sitting right now.
It turns out that he is passionate about all things retro and he used to collect BMX bikes, until one day he actually realized that all these bikes could finally make his poster car dream become a reality. They were all sold, apart from the one in the corner, and a beautiful red 1989 Porsche 911 Carrera 4 took their place.
On the second day of the shoot
it was a perfect spring day, so we decided to do what had to be done – drive
the car on one of the most beautiful driving roads in Ireland – Antrim Coast Road.
After 100+miles of twisty coastal roads, loads of turned heads, some delicious
local burgers and chips, and the soundtrack of that 3.6, I must say I am in
love…
Many people really do not understand
these cars, or classic cars in general – they don’t have all of the modern
extras, they don’t go as fast as their modern alternatives, they are not that
comfortable, they even cost more than the modern equivalents for flip sake; so
why this car then? Because #CLASSIC
You have a key in your hand,
not a plastic microchip, you open the heavy metal doors, slam them and listen
to that noise, yeah, you know what I mean – the sound of a metal tin dropped on
a floor; that is how you know they are properly closed and not by some annoying
beeping sound in the dash, you strap yourself in with a seatbelt that is weaker
than a dog’s leash, start the car (not always with the first go) and your
garage fills with smoke and smell of oil and petrol …There is no radio needed,
there is a massive rev counter right in the centre of the dash, there is a gear
stick, a steering wheel, pedals, the phenomenal noise coming from the engine and
a road that you don’t care where it takes, at that moment you realize… that is
what classic cars are all about.
The Neunelfer a.k.a. the Porsche 911 is the flagship model of the world
famous German luxury sports car manufacturer and is one of the longest running
production cars manufactured in the history – in 2013 the 911 model celebrated
its 50th anniversary. More than 800,000 models have been produced
and I think I am safe to say that this car will still be around for decades.
The two-door high performance grand tourer is built in Stuttgart, Germany and
to make sure nobody would forget that, it is proudly etched into one of the
most beautiful car badges ever made.
Even
though the 911 has been around for 50 years (first one to see the daylight was
back in 1963), their design has barely changed. The owner admitted: “I love that
their design has remained the same – show any 911 model to a child or
grandmother and both of them will know it is a 911”. It is a distinctive and
unique design that makes it so beautiful, with the engine located in the rear,
powered by 2 or 4 wheels. Originally pioneered by Volkswagen group, the engine
up to 1998 in the 911 models, was air-cooled opposed to water, making it the
most successful surviving air cooled engine in the history. Throughout the
years the 911 has won many motorsport journalist awards and made victories in
motorsport, like taking the crown in the world famous Nurburgring series, 24
Hours of Le Mans.
His choice was a stunning red
Porsche 964 Carrera 4, manufactured and sold between 1989 and 1994. This
particular model was designed by Benjamin Dimson in 1986 and even though many
people can’t see many changes from the previous model, the car was 85% different
from the previous model.
Body work received a facelift
from the previous model; the most significant revision was the integrated bumpers
and built in fog lights that were done to improve the aerodynamics along with
the automated spoiler that rises once you travel above 50mph. How cool is that – to me that would be a good
enough reason to want the car (in terms of awesomeness it is right up there
with the pop up lights).
964 models were available in
various body shapes - coupe, targa or cabriolet, but the owner never liked the latter
two, so a coupe was the choice. It was the first Porsche to offer the tiptronic
automatic transmission and four-wheel drive and even though it seems a norm
now, don’t forget we are talking eighties here, when you went crazy over such
an extra as electric windows.
The
biggest upgrade of them all was the engine; previously powered by a 3.2 engine,
the 964 came with a brand new naturally aspirated flat 6 M64 engine with a displacement
of 3.6 litres. It was still rear-mounted, air cooled engine producing 271hp and
310Nm, reaching the redline at 6,700 RPM. If you would be in a rush, the 964 can
do 0-60mph in 5.5 seconds in a manual gearbox and 6.2 with the tiptronic one.
If you aren’t scared of death, the car will allow you to reach 163mph. The
noise from the engine is so phenomenal that there is no point lying I kept
asking the owner, Neil, to relocate the car every 5 minutes in the photo-shoot
so I could just hear it being started and revved again.
The 964 suspension received
some major upgrades as well, replacing the rear torsion bars with coil springs
and shock absorbers; however, this Porsche has been upgraded to a bit more
modern Eibach springs to give a bit meaner stance and be able to go round the
corner a bit faster. For the first time the 911 came equipped with the power
steering and ABS on all models as standard.
The interior was now equipped
with a new automatic climate control system, dual airbags (from 1990 onwards),
and finally there were warning lights tied into the main dash to alert the
driver with the possible problems, not that you ever got one.
This car is a dream to drive
and the owner certainly is not looking to part with it, plans are to keep it
immaculate, stare at it for hours and take it for a drive anytime he wants.
Living the petrolhead’s dream, that is all…
Awesome series of a great car. You images are inspiring..
ReplyDeleteCheers
Boggy
Thank you very much Boggy!
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