Hello all, I'm brand new to the magical world of the 914. I've always been a fan of them, and it APPEARS my dream is about to come true. I've found one locally, and am going to look at it in a few days. Its a 1975 1.8. I'm not a motor head, and was hoping to get some advice on what to look out for, or for signs of danger...
I look forward to getting to know people...
Thanks,
Kyle[i]
First piece of advice, is use the search function. the problem areas of the 914 are covered extensively here. Lots of smart and very helpful people. I am 19 and just bought a 914 about a month ago, blast to drive and you get lots of looks from everyone!
The longs, hell hole, and battery tray are the ones people look for for rust issues. Does the car run or is it a project?
Where is it located. Maybe one of the local guys can go with you to look at it. Search for articles on the hell hole and longs. Rust is the worst thing on these cars. Great to have another local teener.
Let me be the first to say: [Edit: There were no responses when I started typing.]
Let me also be the first to say look out for rust. Mechanically these car are pretty tough but the bodies were not treated at the factory like cars today and they rust. Some rust alot. Do a search for rust and you'll see what to look for.
See if the owner will remove the rocker covers (or at least the screws on the bottom edge) so you can look behind them. Check the area around each jack post and behind them. Probe them with a screw driver.
A common rust area is underneath the battery in the engine compartment. Acid from the battery, washed down by water from above, eats the metal. Bring a flashlight. Poke around in that front passenger side of the engine compartment.
Inside, push the seats foward and pull up the carpets and look at the area where the floor meets the firewall and where the floor meets the sill. Another common rust area as water gets by the rear window seal.
A '75 1.8 liter engine should have the Bosch L-Jet fuel injection system on it.
Take alot of pictures when you go look at it and post them here.
In addition to all of the above mentioned rust areas, also check below the headlights, I think the headlights have to be up to see the area below it. I used to think mine was rust free until I spoted some there, but its not a crucial area.
If its reasonably rust free, then check to see if the car has everything and the engine and trans feel smooth. Im not sure how good it works on the 914's but I heard that you can put a dollar bill at the exhaust and if the valves are bad, in the engine, the dollar bill will get sucked in. (buyer used this once on a old truck I had and the dollar bill actually went into the tailpipe with the motor running)
Some of the weather stripping can also be expensive, so keep that in mind aswell. But the good thing is you can buy almost any of the original parts for these cars...
Oh and incase your wondering you can backdate your bumpers... (I did)
Good Luck!
Ask for a second opinion. There plenty of people in this area who would be happy to look the car over for you. We'd rather all see you going into the project. And these cars are projects!
Tell us where you are, you can get help....free, mostly get them beer mony and they are your friends for life. Problem is....getting rid of them.
Beer money, hell no! I want a full dinner.
38 year old cars are great second cars, not great Daily drivers.
They break down...everything will break.
If you spend a year driving it and fixing it, finally getting to touch every sub system and every wire...then it becomes dependable...until something else breaks.
Rich
Get all the help you can listen and take the advice. The most important thning get a job that pay lots of money It will be an experience that you will not forget the fun and grewat people.
Bill
upgrade the brakes and suspension and learn how to drive a "momentum" car before you go for the high hp Raby motor.
Is it one of the 914's on Craigslist?.. neither of those ads mentions the rear suspension console/ dog ears/ longs, which are prone to rust and can be expensive to fix. It is crucial to get an opinion from an experienced 914 owner.
Two things:
1. Don't look for 'bolt on horsepower'. It doesn't exist. Focus on a nicely running car, not a drag racer.
2. The more you save on the initial purchase, the more you'll spend on repairs (x2 or x3). Spend more now, save more later.
Oh and one more, HAVE FUN!!
...with what he said...
I just joined around Februrary, and these guys & gals are great. Smart people and willing to give advice...Did you expect so many responses so quickly on this thread? :-)
I'm 24, and have a project myself. You will be surprised at the cost of some of the parts. The car is surprisingly easy to work on once you get a feel for it. Like they said, look for those rust areas and use the "search" tool to view older threads. Pelicanparts is THE best source for special Porsche tools and replacement parts for your 914.
http://www.pelicanparts.com/catalog/shopcart/9144_catalog.htm
The Haynes Repair manuals are helpful, and some people have the original Porsche shop manuals as well (though pricey - $300+)
I would vote to get a strong running teener. Get a friend or a good car guy to go with you. Someone not knowing what to look for in these older cars can easily overlook problem spots.
When you buy the car and start driving it... three things.
1. An auto club membership with extended towing priveliges.
2. A cell phone with you at all times.
3. A credit card.
Don't let us scare you away from the car. I have two of them. Drive and love them both. Threaten to sell at least one of them but can't bring myself to do it. You can get lots of help here. The people here are very knowledgable and are very willing to share that knowledge. Don't hesitate to ask for help.
Cheers, Elliot
PS
The best thing to do would be to see if you can get a local 914world member to come along with you to look at the car. Plenty of great people here...
If not, do you have a digital camera? Bring that along and ask the seller if you can snap some photos (they should be fine with this unless they're hiding something). Take some pictures of what you see, problem areas, rust, etc. and show them here. You'll get lots of opinions.
locals cruise craigslist exstensively. better take someone with some insight along, pictures here, whatever, before you hand over the dough. if it's the wrong car, you're screwed.
edit: the white one in hansville?
k
Good advise here... pay heed to all of it.
The other thing to remember... this ain't no Chevy... parts are expensive and some are NLA.
Go in with a critical attitude.
Tetanus shot!
I was fixing some rust today, sorry couldnt resist.
Jim
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