Newbie owner with multiple questions |
|
Porsche, and the Porsche crest are registered trademarks of Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG.
This site is not affiliated with Porsche in any way. Its only purpose is to provide an online forum for car enthusiasts. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners. |
|
Newbie owner with multiple questions |
devil |
Jun 8 2021, 03:52 PM
Post
#1
|
Newbie Group: Members Posts: 8 Joined: 1-June 21 From: Estonia Member No.: 25,597 Region Association: None |
My 914 is finally here! The condition is not as bad as I feared, but is also not as good as I hoped. But as it was always going to be a project car, I’m not yet having much too buyers remorse. Originally a yellow car, but has been painted red (horrible quality, even the side markers have not been removed, only taped up and the painted etc), but by the looks of it, the longs seem to be pretty solid and most body panels look good. I haven’t removed the rockers, but from my first view, only surface rust. Has travelled from California to the Netherlands and now in Estonia. There is something fishy with the front end though – the hood is not flush with the front wings and also the lights sit somewhat lower. Could be that the front has been crashed and then badly rebuilt, but I’ll tackle that much later – first must get it registered and get it running. The engine runs, but I have no idea when the oil was last changed etc, so not trying too much at first – will replace the oil and see what’s what. Of course as a new owner, I have multiple questions and hope you can shed some light for me: 1) Did 914s come with two separate/different keys for the doors and the ignition from the factory? I have 2 keys – one opens the driver door and one is for the ignition, but neither work for the trunk and the passenger door. Hoping that the locks can be somehow unified to work with one or two keys at some point. 2) As I’m located in Europe, can someone recommend a good source for parts? Especially interested in body parts (I know of 914rubber, but as they are in the States, I’d like to skip on paying too much for transport overseas). 3) According to Porsche’s own materials, the correct oil for a 914 should be 20W-50 (at least the Classic oil has those numbers). What’s your take on this? I will not be using the car in the winters of course and the summer here usually doesn’t go about 25C. |
StarBear |
Jun 8 2021, 06:08 PM
Post
#2
|
Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,910 Joined: 2-September 09 From: NJ Member No.: 10,753 Region Association: North East States |
Agree. Brad Penn is now Penn Grade 1. Don’t forget to use lead substitute additive for valve lubrication as new gas doesn’t have it. For suppliers, try VW parts folks as lots of shared parts.
|
Superhawk996 |
Jun 9 2021, 07:43 AM
Post
#3
|
914 Guru Group: Members Posts: 5,892 Joined: 25-August 18 From: Woods of N. Idaho Member No.: 22,428 Region Association: Galt's Gulch |
Don’t forget to use lead substitute additive for valve lubrication as new gas doesn’t have it. For suppliers, try VW parts folks as lots of shared parts. Lead substitute is not necessary. Valve seats are hardened steel inserts in Aluminum heads for these VW Type 4 engines. Ran my first teener over 100k miles without any use of lead substitute. Lead substitute is necessary for old school cast iron heads prior to introduction of hardened valve seats in the 1970's into cast iron heads. |
StarBear |
Jun 9 2021, 08:42 AM
Post
#4
|
Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,910 Joined: 2-September 09 From: NJ Member No.: 10,753 Region Association: North East States |
Don’t forget to use lead substitute additive for valve lubrication as new gas doesn’t have it. For suppliers, try VW parts folks as lots of shared parts. Lead substitute is not necessary. Valve seats are hardened steel inserts in Aluminum heads for these VW Type 4 engines. Ran my first teener over 100k miles without any use of lead substitute. Lead substitute is necessary for old school cast iron heads prior to introduction of hardened valve seats in the 1970's into cast iron heads. Wow; I was advised on this maybe twenty years ago and now not true? Just got a few more bottles. Any harm in using them up? |
wonkipop |
Jun 9 2021, 02:14 PM
Post
#5
|
Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 4,402 Joined: 6-May 20 From: north antarctica Member No.: 24,231 Region Association: NineFourteenerVille |
Don’t forget to use lead substitute additive for valve lubrication as new gas doesn’t have it. For suppliers, try VW parts folks as lots of shared parts. Lead substitute is not necessary. Valve seats are hardened steel inserts in Aluminum heads for these VW Type 4 engines. Ran my first teener over 100k miles without any use of lead substitute. Lead substitute is necessary for old school cast iron heads prior to introduction of hardened valve seats in the 1970's into cast iron heads. Wow; I was advised on this maybe twenty years ago and now not true? Just got a few more bottles. Any harm in using them up? 1.8s were designed to run on unleaded StarBear. thats the reason for the low compression ratio - to cope with low octane rating of early unleaded petrol. cali spec 73 1.7s were the same and had even less power! not certain but i think 1.8s are the first "officially" USA wide unleaded cars and the 1.7s for cali similarly are "officially" unleaded. had not realised what Superhawk says regarding all type 4 engines - re earlier years. could be correct, makes sense. though all the early 911 guys here run the additive in their cars as aus did not go to unleaded until mid 1980s and those engines are euro spec high compression. interesting! you can keep pouring that stuff you have in the gas tank, won't be doing any harm i don't think, but it is unnecessary. @devil - Estonia is part of the EU isn't it. Germany should be a good source of parts for you. There are a few on-line VW and Porsche parts retailers located in Germany. I wouldn't worry too much about shipping parts in from the USA. I do it from Aus - and I live in the country furthest from anywhere else - (get on a plane and fly across the pacific and you will see what i mean). Most of the parts you will be after can still be found in the USA from well established retailers who have been around for a long time, supporting the cars for decades. Basically the 914 survived because Americans refused to let it die. I'm not sure how exchange rates go for you with the euro dollar, but I have generally found its relatively less expernsive to source parts in the USA given exchange rates with AUD and other currencies. i've looked into euro/german/uk part suppliers from time to time, but its always more expensive for me. shipping seems to have settled down after being very disturbed by Covid disruptions last year. Good luck with the car - looks ok. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif) |
StarBear |
Jun 9 2021, 03:45 PM
Post
#6
|
Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,910 Joined: 2-September 09 From: NJ Member No.: 10,753 Region Association: North East States |
Don’t forget to use lead substitute additive for valve lubrication as new gas doesn’t have it. For suppliers, try VW parts folks as lots of shared parts. Lead substitute is not necessary. Valve seats are hardened steel inserts in Aluminum heads for these VW Type 4 engines. Ran my first teener over 100k miles without any use of lead substitute. Lead substitute is necessary for old school cast iron heads prior to introduction of hardened valve seats in the 1970's into cast iron heads. Wow; I was advised on this maybe twenty years ago and now not true? Just got a few more bottles. Any harm in using them up? 1.8s were designed to run on unleaded StarBear. thats the reason for the low compression ratio - to cope with low octane rating of early unleaded petrol. cali spec 73 1.7s were the same and had even less power! not certain but i think 1.8s are the first "officially" USA wide unleaded cars and the 1.7s for cali similarly are "officially" unleaded. had not realised what Superhawk says regarding all type 4 engines - re earlier years. could be correct, makes sense. though all the early 911 guys here run the additive in their cars as aus did not go to unleaded until mid 1980s and those engines are euro spec high compression. interesting! you can keep pouring that stuff you have in the gas tank, won't be doing any harm i don't think, but it is unnecessary. @devil - Estonia is part of the EU isn't it. Germany should be a good source of parts for you. There are a few on-line VW and Porsche parts retailers located in Germany. I wouldn't worry too much about shipping parts in from the USA. I do it from Aus - and I live in the country furthest from anywhere else - (get on a plane and fly across the pacific and you will see what i mean). Most of the parts you will be after can still be found in the USA from well established retailers who have been around for a long time, supporting the cars for decades. Basically the 914 survived because Americans refused to let it die. I'm not sure how exchange rates go for you with the euro dollar, but I have generally found its relatively less expernsive to source parts in the USA given exchange rates with AUD and other currencies. i've looked into euro/german/uk part suppliers from time to time, but its always more expensive for me. shipping seems to have settled down after being very disturbed by Covid disruptions last year. Good luck with the car - looks ok. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif) Ack, my AUS buddy! Onward! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/driving.gif) |
wonkipop |
Jun 10 2021, 03:05 AM
Post
#7
|
Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 4,402 Joined: 6-May 20 From: north antarctica Member No.: 24,231 Region Association: NineFourteenerVille |
Don’t forget to use lead substitute additive for valve lubrication as new gas doesn’t have it. For suppliers, try VW parts folks as lots of shared parts. Lead substitute is not necessary. Valve seats are hardened steel inserts in Aluminum heads for these VW Type 4 engines. Ran my first teener over 100k miles without any use of lead substitute. Lead substitute is necessary for old school cast iron heads prior to introduction of hardened valve seats in the 1970's into cast iron heads. Wow; I was advised on this maybe twenty years ago and now not true? Just got a few more bottles. Any harm in using them up? 1.8s were designed to run on unleaded StarBear. thats the reason for the low compression ratio - to cope with low octane rating of early unleaded petrol. cali spec 73 1.7s were the same and had even less power! not certain but i think 1.8s are the first "officially" USA wide unleaded cars and the 1.7s for cali similarly are "officially" unleaded. had not realised what Superhawk says regarding all type 4 engines - re earlier years. could be correct, makes sense. though all the early 911 guys here run the additive in their cars as aus did not go to unleaded until mid 1980s and those engines are euro spec high compression. interesting! you can keep pouring that stuff you have in the gas tank, won't be doing any harm i don't think, but it is unnecessary. @devil - Estonia is part of the EU isn't it. Germany should be a good source of parts for you. There are a few on-line VW and Porsche parts retailers located in Germany. I wouldn't worry too much about shipping parts in from the USA. I do it from Aus - and I live in the country furthest from anywhere else - (get on a plane and fly across the pacific and you will see what i mean). Most of the parts you will be after can still be found in the USA from well established retailers who have been around for a long time, supporting the cars for decades. Basically the 914 survived because Americans refused to let it die. I'm not sure how exchange rates go for you with the euro dollar, but I have generally found its relatively less expernsive to source parts in the USA given exchange rates with AUD and other currencies. i've looked into euro/german/uk part suppliers from time to time, but its always more expensive for me. shipping seems to have settled down after being very disturbed by Covid disruptions last year. Good luck with the car - looks ok. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif) Ack, my AUS buddy! Onward! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/driving.gif) kicking myself, 30 years later, coulda bought a 73 1.7 with 4 more horsepower if i knew what superhawk and mark henry are telling us now. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/chair.gif) just as well i've fallen in luv with L jet. |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 8th June 2024 - 01:30 AM |
All rights reserved 914World.com © since 2002 |
914World.com is the fastest growing online 914 community! We have it all, classifieds, events, forums, vendors, parts, autocross, racing, technical articles, events calendar, newsletter, restoration, gallery, archives, history and more for your Porsche 914 ... |