1997 911 price

I have an opportunity to purchase a 1977 911 (no turbo). It has

125,000 miles and appears to be in good condition. The body is straight except for some minor rock chip dings around the nose. The engine has had a lot of work done to it over the years (the seller has extensive maintenance records) . Around 55,000 miles there was $9000 worth of work done. The seller tells me that the engine was upgraded to 220hp. I can attest that the car does go like a bat out of hell.

I have never considered buying a Porsche before, I didn't think I could afford it, but this deal kinda dropped into my lap. I really like the car, and the price seems reasonable to me, but I would like the opinion of some people who know more about this than I do. The seller is asking $12,000. I thank you in advance for your time in considering this matter. Jim

Reply to
nospam
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I'm assuming that this is a 1977...not a 1997.

A lot of the value of the car is based on its condition and the work done to keep it in good condition. Original 1977 cars had a crude, "thermal reactor" emissions system that tended to "cook" the engine and transmission. Removing this system and replacing it with a conventional one of stainless "SSI" conversions is done quite a bit. Depending upon the regulations where you live, there may be no smog regulations on a car this old.

The price on a car this old is simply based on its condition and what you're willing to pay. If the car's in good shape, doesn't leak much oil, and runs great...buy it...but do have it checked out by a disinterested, experienced Porsche technician...not the one who regularly services the car.

Reply to
Weekend Guru

If you get it and it disolves, you're out $12k.

If that's a lot of money for you, then don't do it.

Also, if this is your first Porsche, the things can be really expensive to fix. You should budget another $5k in case it needs work. Yes, yesy, get it inspected but that doesn't come with insurance.

snipped-for-privacy@nospam.com wrote:

Reply to
someone

Have you driven a 911 before, so that you have a frame of reference? How familiar are you with the cars? It might be best to have someone with a similar-vintage Porsche come along to look it over. The '75-77 cars frequently have rebuilds or engine swaps, so the car might be upgraded if the owner was of the "while I'm in there" school of thought, but the cars were only partially rust-proofed so that can be an issue. You're right that a '77 with 220 hp would be damn fast (close to Turbo performance for that era). But there should also be documentation about brake upgrades and suspension tuning to deal with the extra 50 horses. Also, a good place to find affordable Porsches is the Pelican Parts web site - the for sale board has had some nice deals come up, and there's currently a 911SC up for under 10 grand; the seller's in a hurry as he's being deployed this week. Emanuel

Reply to
E Brown

I don't agree with the reference to the cost to repair a Porsche over any other models of cars. My wife had 2400 worth of work done on her Ford Exploder by the dealer and I sent in mine to a Porsche specialist for the same work for comparable cost.

Now a new Dashboard will set you back 500+ and a set of new rear seals for my Targa's top are around 480.00 bucks. Sounds expensive?

Well if you intend to do restorative work on an older Porsche to the extent that the wife complains.... I just explain the facts: My car ins is lower than her new car. Incl. collision, 1800 for year, daily driver. My regist fees and taxes are 32.00 No payments, it's paid for.

So I plow money into this car not for taxes payments and such.

Reply to
Garrak

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