Impure thoughts, I might have a line on... |
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Impure thoughts, I might have a line on... |
Carlitos Way |
Nov 11 2004, 04:16 PM
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#1
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I did it MY WAY Group: Members Posts: 1,337 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Simi Valley, CA Member No.: 2,757 Region Association: Southern California |
One of the guys at work has a 76 912 that he offered to sell me. I personally don't have much of an interest in a 912, but then I started thinking... can I use any of the parts off the 912 for my 914? What, if anything could I take out of the car? axels? brakes? 5 bolt wheels (or are they 4 bolt?)????
Or is it a 912 worthwhile "investment"??? What are those worth anyway? I'm sure it's only a 4 cylinder engine, so I can't imagine that it would hold its value as well as a 911. Please let |
sanman |
Nov 11 2004, 04:29 PM
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#2
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Leaving California Group: Members Posts: 341 Joined: 17-June 04 From: Houston, TX Member No.: 2,219 Region Association: None |
I think the early ones are worth more but I would personal like the 76 better because I feel comfortable with the t4 and the t4 prices
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lapuwali |
Nov 11 2004, 04:34 PM
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#3
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Not another one! Group: Benefactors Posts: 4,526 Joined: 1-March 04 From: San Mateo, CA Member No.: 1,743 |
A '76 is a 912E, meaning it has a Type IV engine in it. Aside from tin, the engine mount, and a few other odds-and-ends, this is identical to the 2.0 engine found in the '76 914.
The major downside to this car is that it weighs a lot more than a 914, yet makes the same power. However, by forking out the money to Jake, et al, you can make just as much power as any 914. The gearbox is unique to the car (only made for that one year). It's basically a 915 with a 901 input shaft and different gearing. The stock exhaust, at least in CA form, has thermal reactors that cook the engine double quick. If you're in CA, you're beyond the smog cutoff, alas. The rest of the car is the same as the '76 911. Front suspension, brakes, and wheels will swap to the 914 if you change out the rear hubs. The early 912s are totally different beasts. Different engine, different gearbox, much lighter body. The early cars are rising in price. I don't know about the 912E, though. I've seen people ask pretty silly prices for them ($10K). |
Mueller |
Nov 11 2004, 04:35 PM
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#4
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914 Freak! Group: Members Posts: 17,146 Joined: 4-January 03 From: Antioch, CA Member No.: 87 Region Association: None |
is the car junk or what?
nothing wrong with a 912 at all, only "issue" is that for a '76 it has to be smogged the transmissions are highly sought after since it's a 915 transmission with a type IV input shaft, only made that one year the front suspension would fit a 914 to give you a 5 lug suspension.... I'd hate to see the car get parted out just to put a few parts onto a 914 (IMG:style_emoticons/default/sad.gif) |
Carlitos Way |
Nov 11 2004, 04:41 PM
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#5
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I did it MY WAY Group: Members Posts: 1,337 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Simi Valley, CA Member No.: 2,757 Region Association: Southern California |
I'm supposed to take a look at the car this weekend. I'll decide if it's worth salvaging for/by me. Otherwise, I might just pick it up and offer it on evilbay for sale. Maybe I can get some $$$ for my 914 upgrades that way.
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lapuwali |
Nov 11 2004, 04:55 PM
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#6
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Not another one! Group: Benefactors Posts: 4,526 Joined: 1-March 04 From: San Mateo, CA Member No.: 1,743 |
The '76s where at least partly galvanised (can't remember when they went from the lower-half only to the whole car), so it's unlikely to be a rust bucket. Chances are, it won't pass smog, which is why said friend is willing to unload it.
It would form the basis for a killer track car for any CA owner. You might even be able to sneak past the smog police w/o the thermal reactors, as I believe they don't really care if you're running a header if you don't have a cat, which this car won't. If you could get 110hp or thereabouts with small mods, it would make a great daily driver. A LOT quieter than a 914. |
McMark |
Nov 11 2004, 09:02 PM
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#7
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914 Freak! Group: Retired Admin Posts: 20,179 Joined: 13-March 03 From: Grand Rapids, MI Member No.: 419 Region Association: None |
The 912e is great. I like the look of the early 912s, but if you want a 911 look go for it. Remember you can always put a bigger Type IV in there. Is the L-Jet more forgiving to high performance/bigger cammed motors? A 912e with a hot cam 2056 would be a blast to drive without spending a ton.
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lapuwali |
Nov 11 2004, 11:12 PM
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#8
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Not another one! Group: Benefactors Posts: 4,526 Joined: 1-March 04 From: San Mateo, CA Member No.: 1,743 |
L-Jet can be reasonably forgiving of engine mods, as long as you don't go too wild. A really wild cam with mess with the airflow meter. Eventually, the meter itself becomes the bottleneck. However, I'm told that using meters from other cars with bigger engines will work with any analog L-Jet ECU. Back in my Alfa days, people regularly talked about using a 3L BMW airflow meter on a hot 2.5 Alfa V6 and it just worked. Even the factory tuning arm, Autodelta, did this. I don't know if you could go so wild as to put a 2270 in there and have it work. However, swapping to aftermarket EFI can be done basically invisibly, and you'd solve that problem pretty easily. If the exhaust could be sorted, you'd have a 130hp 912E, which only puts it about 30hp down on the 911 of the day (the 2.7 was a pretty awful engine in stock trim).
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Mueller |
Nov 12 2004, 12:22 AM
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#9
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914 Freak! Group: Members Posts: 17,146 Joined: 4-January 03 From: Antioch, CA Member No.: 87 Region Association: None |
don't forget, with the lighter engine than a 911, the 912 would be a great auto-x car, much more neutral
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kafermeister |
Nov 12 2004, 11:53 AM
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#10
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 778 Joined: 20-January 03 From: Cincinnati/Northern KY Member No.: 174 |
QUOTE(lapuwali @ Nov 11 2004, 06:55 PM) The '76s where at least partly galvanised (can't remember when they went from the lower-half only to the whole car) <snip> The '77 was first for the full galvanized body IIRC. '76 was half as you said. |
Sammy |
Nov 12 2004, 03:51 PM
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#11
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. Group: Members Posts: 1,190 Joined: 21-January 03 From: Orange, Ca Member No.: 178 |
You can't turbo a 912.
(IMG:style_emoticons/default/chairfall.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/rolling.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/jester.gif) (IMG:style_emoticons/default/laugh.gif) I crack me up. |
Eric_Shea |
Nov 12 2004, 05:40 PM
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#12
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PMB Performance Group: Admin Posts: 19,275 Joined: 3-September 03 From: Salt Lake City, UT Member No.: 1,110 Region Association: Rocky Mountains |
76's were the first full galvanized cars.
71-75's were pan only. 76 912E's ROCK. It's a 76 911 with a T4 914 motor in it (gee Hans, what do we do with all these left over T4's now that we ditched the 914 project?). Excellent 915 tranny (923 I think is the model designation). Great autocross car. Great drive around town car that will net you some decent fuel mileage. Me would go fur it. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smilie_pokal.gif) |
Carlitos Way |
Nov 12 2004, 06:22 PM
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#13
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I did it MY WAY Group: Members Posts: 1,337 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Simi Valley, CA Member No.: 2,757 Region Association: Southern California |
Is this actually more "desireable" than the 914? Or am I going to get bood and hissed at for even mentioning this?
C. |
ArtechnikA |
Nov 12 2004, 06:24 PM
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#14
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rich herzog Group: Members Posts: 7,390 Joined: 4-April 03 From: Salted Roads, PA Member No.: 513 Region Association: None |
QUOTE(Eric_Shea @ Nov 12 2004, 03:40 PM) 76's were the first full galvanized cars. 71-75's were pan only. you must show me the reference for '71 pans being galvanised. mine shows no evidence of any rust inhibitor anywhere... just saw a 912e having sold for a tick under $16k. i don't get it - but if the buyer is happy at that price who am i to complain ... |
Carlitos Way |
Nov 12 2004, 06:27 PM
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#15
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I did it MY WAY Group: Members Posts: 1,337 Joined: 14-September 04 From: Simi Valley, CA Member No.: 2,757 Region Association: Southern California |
I think I saw a reference to galvanizing on the bird board... but I didn't pay CLOSE attention to it. There was some mention of SOME cars being galvanized and galvanization at different levels... If I decide to act on this, I'll let you guys know... plus... might be worth a few pics.
C. |
Eric_Shea |
Nov 12 2004, 06:28 PM
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#16
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PMB Performance Group: Admin Posts: 19,275 Joined: 3-September 03 From: Salt Lake City, UT Member No.: 1,110 Region Association: Rocky Mountains |
Rich, 71.5 actually. Check with Bruce A. he referrences it in his fine little publication. Mine's perfect (and I always wondered why).
Carlos, they're totally different cars and that's the best way to look at it. No boos. No hisses. I've got a soft spot for the 76 912E (probably the T4) |
Eric_Shea |
Nov 12 2004, 06:48 PM
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#17
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PMB Performance Group: Admin Posts: 19,275 Joined: 3-September 03 From: Salt Lake City, UT Member No.: 1,110 Region Association: Rocky Mountains |
(page 19, Second Edition, 4th paragraph)
"The company's second choice was to galvanize the exposed portions of the car's underbody sheetmetal, which it started to do to the 911s in the summer of 1970 for the 1971 2.2-liter models..." "At the 1975 Frankfurt Auto Show, Porsche introduced a fully rust-proofed body to go with its galvanized chassis..." "Beginning mid-year 1976 all of the 911s have been made of galvanized sheet metal. For the first few months after the introduction the roof section was not galvanized, but by the end of the production year the roof was galvanized as well." So it was actually 71 and 76.5 |
lapuwali |
Nov 12 2004, 07:22 PM
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#18
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Not another one! Group: Benefactors Posts: 4,526 Joined: 1-March 04 From: San Mateo, CA Member No.: 1,743 |
QUOTE Is this actually more "desireable" than the 914? As always, it depends on what you desire in a car. Are they worth more on the open market? No, not really. There are a lot fewer of them than the 914 (something like 2000 made). Some of the parts on the car are unique to it, and thus scarce and getting more so every day. They're NOT the raw sports car the 914 is. They're a very nice daily driver that handles like a lighter, better balanced mid-70s 911 (which is to say, not as well as a sorted 914). Bone stock, they're slow in a straight line (no faster, and probably slower, than a stock 1.7 914). They're underappreciated. This may change (and, indeed, it seems to be changing), much like it is changing for the 914. I personally wouldn't have one in California only because of the smog problem. If the smog cutoff was '76 instead of '75, well, I'd still probably have an earlier 912, because I think they look nicer and they're a lot lighter (and a Type 4 will go in there relatively easily for big power). |
mskala |
Nov 12 2004, 08:15 PM
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#19
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R Group: Members Posts: 1,925 Joined: 2-January 03 From: Massachusetts Member No.: 79 Region Association: None |
QUOTE(Eric_Shea @ Nov 12 2004, 06:40 PM) (gee Hans, what do we do with all these left over T4's now that we ditched the 914 project?). I think it was more like, "We just killed the 914 and the 924 won't be around till next model year, are we going to have a showroom with only 1 car in it?" (IMG:style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif) |
lapuwali |
Nov 12 2004, 08:36 PM
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#20
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Not another one! Group: Benefactors Posts: 4,526 Joined: 1-March 04 From: San Mateo, CA Member No.: 1,743 |
QUOTE are we going to have a showroom with only 1 car in it? I know you're joking, but... The 930 came out in '76, too, so they would have had at least three (911, 914, 930). Since they didn't actually make any 914s in '76, just cleared out inventory, the 912E ended up not being required at all, really. |
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