So somebody posted this car up early this week on one of our "cheap race cars" facebook threads. There was some laughing about making it a rally car (sicne most of the guys in that thread do rally/rallycross) and many "what could go wrongs." So without telling anyone on there I called the seller and got a good conversation going with him. He had it listed at $1300 and I told him I'd like to send him some cash to have him hold it until he could show it to me on Friday. Alternately, I said I'd send him $1k sight-unseen on the car, knowing that these things are galvanized so rust (my greatest hate) is likely not an issue. He declined both but said that since I was cool about it all he would give me the "first look" at the car on Friday when he could get off work and his MBA classes at night. I nervously waited the three days, assuming that since this was from CL, he would just sell it to someone else. But he didn't. He said, "come see it first Friday, and if you want to take it, it's yours for $1k.
So I got a ride out there, $1050 in hand ($50 added on just because he was cool to hold it for me) and went to see it. As expected, not quite as nice as how it looked in pictures on CL, but certainly (IMO) worth over $1k seeing as the engine sounded good and it was cosmetically not terrible. This being a 1988 "S" model, it is essentially a 1988 Porsche 944 with the old 924 body. This year also has the highest horsepower of all 924 models (160) due to a higher compression ratio on the 2.5L than in 1987 (150hp). All in all, for performance at least I would say the '88 is the most desirable model). Didn't take much time to see it was worth a project status, so I picked it up, with a few notes from the owner (recent brake job, new catback exhaust, a few other things good - and notes on some non-working electrical things (headlight popup motors, air conditioning) and that "first and second gear you really have to push the shifter to the left to get them to engage." I thought he was kidding and as we pulled away....yup, I was in 3rd. Took me about 4 blocks in city traffic to figure out the force and direction needed to get it into 1st/2nd. Luckily, the 2.5 proved torquey enough to get me going in 3rd from several stoplights before I did.
Drive home was about 20 miles in DC rush-hour traffic with about a billion stoplights. It was 97 degrees here today. Black car. No A/C. Sunroof sealed shut with silicone to stop an apparent old leak. At stops the water temp gauge was getting into the red (and at about 3/4 when moving) so I got pretty nervous and stopped to check coolant, etc. Car seemed to run fine though. Buddy behind me reported no issues other than a non-working turn signal and a "slightly crooked tail light."
Anyhow after some minor nervousness followed by a few stints of "opening it up" I started really enjoying to drive the car, even with crap old tires on it and clearly worn suspension bushings, and hard shifting to 1st/2nd. The ride was excellent if a bit soft and damn it was hot in there. But made it home with no issues. My wife was unimpressed that THIS was the "Porsche" I had brought home, lol....
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Jumping backwards a bit, I'll note that as a child of the 80s I always liked the 924 and 944 (and 928) probably just as much as the 911s...heresy, I know. Someday (maybe when I turn 50) I'll get a 911 but for the time being I wanted a fun project that was small enough to fit in my cramped garage and similar era to my e30 (hopefully all the Germans do things similarly, right? haha...) Pre-1991 gets me vintage tags and no inspection/emissions in Virginia, to boot. I almost pulled the trigger on 924s a few other times, but they were all older ones with the 2.0 Audi lump and I never convinced myself those would be much fun to drive. I already have a 1.8L e30 and a Triumph GT6....so plenty of low-power stuff.
I'll also note that the GT6 has just frustrated me. It's driveable, but I just don't enjoy driving it at all. It handles as well as a GT6 can, but that's not saying too much. It feels terribly unsafe in this area of giant SUVs and people on cell phones. And it's noisy from every area thanks to British build quality 45 years ago. Someday I'll get back to it. In the meantime I wanted a GT car I could "make nice" to go weekend cruising or short road trips with the wife (and perhaps two little kids). I have the WRX, which is fast and reliable....but the girls (wife, daughters) all hate riding in it because it's kind of loud and very stiffly-sprung...not terribly comfy for just cruising.
So here is my solution. The plan here has nothign to do with rally, racing, or a high-performance build. The plan here is to make the car reasonably nice (not show quality); keep it mostly original (maybe wheel/tire upgrades and some suspension improvements), make it as reliable as a Porsche can be, and just enjoy it on those nice autumn weekends and such. This build won't be at the manic pace the rally car was, since I have no schedule and a paltry budget at the moment, and this won't be a "restoration" or "collectible car" build by any means. It will be a "driver" build. But I hope you all will stick around and lend your usual advice, encouragement, etc....