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Lizard
Joined: 03 Nov 2002 Posts: 9364 Location: Abbotsford BC. Canada
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Posted: Wed Sep 03, 2003 1:43 pm Post subject: |
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I only drive my car that fast in spots where it is only me on the road noone else and no chance of someone pulling out on me _________________ 3 928s, |
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CMXXXI
Joined: 05 Nov 2002 Posts: 1939 Location: Vicksburg, MS
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Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2003 2:58 am Post subject: |
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SprintStar wrote: | Wow... You drove your 931 on the Autobahn and brought it back to the US? Is your a tourist delivery car? |
No, I was in the Army at the time, stationed in Germany. I bought the car off a dealership used car lot, drove it for 3 years over there, had it converted to meet DOT specs then shipped it back to the States. I don't regret the hassle it entailed.
I tried to buy a new 951 on the "Overseas Delivery Plan", but couldn't arrange financing in time. I waited too long before looking into the program, and couldn't meet the time restrictions. I had to have actually purchased the car at a Stateside dealership, and have the transaction completed 30 days before I wanted to take delivery at the Zuffenhausen facility. The deal was to pick the car up at Porsche, drive it for so many days (30 max I think), then drop it back off at the plant. They would then install the cat converter (no unleaded fuel in Germany back then) and ship it to the States. I was responsible for pickup or further shipment once it arrived on the East Coast.
Having to arrange financing, coordinate pickup and re-delivery in time to meet my rotation date back to the States just didn't work out. Realistically, I should have started about 90-120 days before my return date.
I ended up buying a new 951 off a stateside dealership lot within 10 days of me returning back to the USA. The car I bought was identical to what I would have had "made to order". Couldn't have been luckier, but sure wish I could have taken a European delivery. _________________ '79 Eurospec 931 |
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SprintStar
Joined: 26 Aug 2003 Posts: 150
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Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2003 2:10 pm Post subject: |
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CMXXXI wrote: | SprintStar wrote: | Wow... You drove your 931 on the Autobahn and brought it back to the US? Is your a tourist delivery car? |
No, I was in the Army at the time, stationed in Germany. I bought the car off a dealership used car lot, drove it for 3 years over there, had it converted to meet DOT specs then shipped it back to the States. I don't regret the hassle it entailed.
I tried to buy a new 951 on the "Overseas Delivery Plan", but couldn't arrange financing in time. I waited too long before looking into the program, and couldn't meet the time restrictions. I had to have actually purchased the car at a Stateside dealership, and have the transaction completed 30 days before I wanted to take delivery at the Zuffenhausen facility. The deal was to pick the car up at Porsche, drive it for so many days (30 max I think), then drop it back off at the plant. They would then install the cat converter (no unleaded fuel in Germany back then) and ship it to the States. I was responsible for pickup or further shipment once it arrived on the East Coast.
Having to arrange financing, coordinate pickup and re-delivery in time to meet my rotation date back to the States just didn't work out. Realistically, I should have started about 90-120 days before my return date.
I ended up buying a new 951 off a stateside dealership lot within 10 days of me returning back to the USA. The car I bought was identical to what I would have had "made to order". Couldn't have been luckier, but sure wish I could have taken a European delivery. |
You lucky man!!!!! That's quite a story! Do you still have the 951?
Sprint. |
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CMXXXI
Joined: 05 Nov 2002 Posts: 1939 Location: Vicksburg, MS
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2003 2:27 am Post subject: |
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Nope, unfortunately I sold it back in '91. I left the Army, moved, got a new job, got divorced, moved again. The cost to maintain it was beyond my means with all that going on. Sure wish I could have afforded to keep it. I held on to the 931 because it was paid for, solely in my name, it is a "rare" '79 model and I figure I may never be able to afford another new Porsche. I'm just glad that I'm mechanically inclined and now have the funds, facilities & time to refurbish and maintain it. _________________ '79 Eurospec 931 |
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SprintStar
Joined: 26 Aug 2003 Posts: 150
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2003 12:34 pm Post subject: |
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CMXXXI wrote: | Nope, unfortunately I sold it back in '91. I left the Army, moved, got a new job, got divorced, moved again. The cost to maintain it was beyond my means with all that going on. Sure wish I could have afforded to keep it. I held on to the 931 because it was paid for, solely in my name, it is a "rare" '79 model and I figure I may never be able to afford another new Porsche. I'm just glad that I'm mechanically inclined and now have the funds, facilities & time to refurbish and maintain it. |
931 rules!
Sprint. |
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SprintStar
Joined: 26 Aug 2003 Posts: 150
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2003 12:34 pm Post subject: |
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CMXXXI wrote: | Nope, unfortunately I sold it back in '91. I left the Army, moved, got a new job, got divorced, moved again. The cost to maintain it was beyond my means with all that going on. Sure wish I could have afforded to keep it. I held on to the 931 because it was paid for, solely in my name, it is a "rare" '79 model and I figure I may never be able to afford another new Porsche. I'm just glad that I'm mechanically inclined and now have the funds, facilities & time to refurbish and maintain it. |
931 rules!
Sprint. |
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SprintStar
Joined: 26 Aug 2003 Posts: 150
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Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2003 12:37 pm Post subject: |
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CMXXXI wrote: | Nope, unfortunately I sold it back in '91. I left the Army, moved, got a new job, got divorced, moved again. The cost to maintain it was beyond my means with all that going on. Sure wish I could have afforded to keep it. I held on to the 931 because it was paid for, solely in my name, it is a "rare" '79 model and I figure I may never be able to afford another new Porsche. I'm just glad that I'm mechanically inclined and now have the funds, facilities & time to refurbish and maintain it. |
931 rules!
Sprint. |
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Kenodog
Joined: 25 Jun 2003 Posts: 2651 Location: Vancouver,B.C.
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Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2003 1:53 pm Post subject: |
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I had my '80 931 up to 4000 rpm in 5th gear on the Coquihalla hwy. Does anyone know how fast that is? My speedo only goes to 85 _________________ 1979 Euro 931, Olive
1981 931, Sabine
1991 Ford Ranger XLT 4x4, Ricky
1996 Ford E-350 ex-FedEx Van
2014 Mazda CX-5 (Kinderwagon)
2019 KTM 790 Adventure
2024 KLX300
2024 KLX140 |
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SprintStar
Joined: 26 Aug 2003 Posts: 150
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Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2003 3:26 pm Post subject: |
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Kenodog wrote: | I had my '80 931 up to 4000 rpm in 5th gear on the Coquihalla hwy. Does anyone know how fast that is? My speedo only goes to 85 |
On my '82 Euro 931, 55mph is about 2000rpm and 110mph is right about 4000rpm, So I'd say you're doing the same!
Sprint. |
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CMXXXI
Joined: 05 Nov 2002 Posts: 1939 Location: Vicksburg, MS
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2003 4:06 am Post subject: |
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My math puts it just under 95 mph. My Eurospec snailshell gives me ~70mph@3000rpm in 5th. 70/3000=.023333mph/rpm. .02333x4000=93.333
It'll take you about 4300rpm to hit 100
About 4700 for 110
About 5150 for 120
About 5500 for 130
Somewhere between 6K and redline you'll top out somewhere in the neighborhood of 140. As they say, "don't try this at home", and do be careful if you want to validate these figures on the road.
...Your mileage may vary of course .... _________________ '79 Eurospec 931 |
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924 turbo
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1566 Location: Simi Valley, CA, USA
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2003 10:38 am Post subject: |
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And my math puts you at around 105.
Gear ratios, I think, for the '80 North American-spec snailshell:
1st: 3.166
2nd: 1.777
3rd: 1.217
4th: 0.931
5th: 0.6
Differential: 4.714 _________________ Jon Furst |
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Paul
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 9491 Location: Southeast Wisconsin
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2003 11:26 am Post subject: |
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My 80 931 owner's manual "speed in gears" graph says 105. |
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924 turbo
Joined: 02 Nov 2002 Posts: 1566 Location: Simi Valley, CA, USA
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2003 11:28 am Post subject: |
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Thanks for the verification, Paul. _________________ Jon Furst |
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Kenodog
Joined: 25 Jun 2003 Posts: 2651 Location: Vancouver,B.C.
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2003 1:07 pm Post subject: |
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Gotta get me an owners manual _________________ 1979 Euro 931, Olive
1981 931, Sabine
1991 Ford Ranger XLT 4x4, Ricky
1996 Ford E-350 ex-FedEx Van
2014 Mazda CX-5 (Kinderwagon)
2019 KTM 790 Adventure
2024 KLX300
2024 KLX140 |
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CMXXXI
Joined: 05 Nov 2002 Posts: 1939 Location: Vicksburg, MS
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Posted: Wed Sep 24, 2003 7:04 am Post subject: |
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I checked out my owner's manual and some on-line RPM-MPH calculators, and it would seem that either my speedo or my tach is in error if my owners manual is correct. According to them, at 3000rpm in 5th I should be doing between 75-80, not just ~70.
But, I've timed myself traveling at 60 and at 70 (indicated) over a measured 2-mile stretch of Interstate, and the speedo appears to be correct. I'm running 205/60x15 tires which are a tad smaller than the stock 185/70's and that would account for some of the difference betweem the book and my observations, but to match the book output figures I'd have to do a 3000rpm mile in something like 45-47 seconds, not the 50-51 I'm observing. I've got a hand-held tach & dwell meter, but I can't get it to do anything regardless of how I hook it up (so much for my $7 yard sale purchase).
The figures in my German language '79 Turbo manual give the same gear ratios for 1-4 as 924Turbo quoted, but the fifth gear ratio is listed as .706, with a differential ratio of 4.125.
These ratios are "slower" than the US gearbox of 1980 which also surprised me. I would have guessed that the European version would have been geared more for hi-end, whereas the US model would have been engineered for lowered emissions and higher fuel economy. Shows you what I know, huh? Could be because it was the 1st production year too, so who knows...?
I scanned the N/A data also if anyone is interested, and you can click here for the 4 & 5 speed acceleration curves, or here for the power curves. _________________ '79 Eurospec 931 |
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