Planning question for my new 1973 2.0 |
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Planning question for my new 1973 2.0 |
adiokyro |
Feb 26 2013, 12:27 PM
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#1
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Oakland, Ca Group: Members Posts: 74 Joined: 27-January 13 From: United States Member No.: 15,437 Region Association: Northern California |
ok so I bought this car, many of you thought perhaps I shouldnt but I spoke with the guy and he assured me no hell hole rust etc, and I have ebay buyer protection, so I took the chance BECAUSE I LOVE HER!!!!
here's my question: car has the original unsplit 2.0 converted to weber 44's I have a spare 2.0 with the FI system minus the brain. I want to A. have a great time driving the car, and B. have an eye towards retaining resale value for some day. should I: A. pull the carbs and install/upgrade the FI I have in a box on the car B. bore and stroke and rebuild my 2.0 mildly, use the weber 44's on it and rip around, retaining the original matching #'s 2.0 with my FI system in my shed for future buyer restoration. C. shut the hell up, save my money and drive the car. (option 'C' is unlikely as I have the car parts bug bag.) I would like a little pep whilst driving through hills not sure if stock 2.0 FI has much? Ill of course address the rust spots, likely paint and install my 911 front suspension thanks |
adiokyro |
Feb 26 2013, 12:28 PM
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#2
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Oakland, Ca Group: Members Posts: 74 Joined: 27-January 13 From: United States Member No.: 15,437 Region Association: Northern California |
ok so I bought this car, many of you thought perhaps I shouldnt but I spoke with the guy and he assured me no hell hole rust etc, and I have ebay buyer protection, so I took the chance BECAUSE I LOVE HER!!!! here's my question: car has the original unsplit 2.0 converted to weber 44's I have a spare 2.0 with the FI system minus the brain. I want to A. have a great time driving the car, and B. have an eye towards retaining resale value for some day. should I: A. pull the carbs and install/upgrade the FI I have in a box on the car B. bore and stroke and rebuild my 2.0 mildly, use the weber 44's on it and rip around, retaining the original matching #'s 2.0 with my FI system in my shed for future buyer restoration. C. shut the hell up, save my money and drive the car. (option 'C' is unlikely as I have the car parts bug bag.) I would like a little pep whilst driving through hills not sure if stock 2.0 FI has much? Ill of course address the rust spots, likely paint and install my 911 front suspension thanks http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/S-GROUP-/14...e#ht_500wt_1183 |
KELTY360 |
Feb 26 2013, 12:35 PM
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#3
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914 Neferati Group: Members Posts: 5,031 Joined: 31-December 05 From: Pt. Townsend, WA Member No.: 5,344 Region Association: Pacific Northwest |
Have you driven the car? I'd withhold judgement on engine upgrades til you've had a chance to see how it runs. IMO, FI is a better option than carbs, once it's sorted out, especially since MPS diaphragms are now available. '73 2.0 CHT availability is still problematic though. You can have a lot of fun with a stock 2.0. Unless you've got a deep wallet, don't be in a hurry to make changes til you've had a chance to see what you've got.
(IMG:style_emoticons/default/welcome.png) |
JamesM |
Feb 26 2013, 12:37 PM
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#4
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1,900 Joined: 6-April 06 From: Kearns, UT Member No.: 5,834 Region Association: Intermountain Region |
Why no pics of the battery tray side? Oh well, to late now it sounds like.
As for the motor, if it is completly stock then I dont see how the carbs would be adding anything to it (other then hard cold starts). Slap the FI on it and have fun while while you build something hotter with the spare |
JawjaPorsche |
Feb 26 2013, 01:19 PM
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#5
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Advanced Member Group: Members Posts: 3,463 Joined: 23-July 11 From: Clayton, Georgia Member No.: 13,351 Region Association: South East States |
Good luck with the purchase and let us know your progress when you get her. Nice color! (IMG:style_emoticons/default/beerchug.gif)
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ellisor3 |
Feb 26 2013, 02:07 PM
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#6
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HPWhore Group: Members Posts: 811 Joined: 23-October 08 From: Fleming Island, Florida Member No.: 9,683 Region Association: South East States |
With most of these cars you will find that there are thing you MUST do to the car before you can do the things that you Want to do to the car.
Get the car home, do a through inspection, make a list of priorities and go from there. Start with things that are safety concerns first like fuel lines, suspension parts, and electrical wiring. FI is the way to go for a daily/frequent driver. |
adiokyro |
Feb 26 2013, 05:19 PM
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#7
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Oakland, Ca Group: Members Posts: 74 Joined: 27-January 13 From: United States Member No.: 15,437 Region Association: Northern California |
thanks guys that all sounds like great advice. I asked him why he called it 's group' and he said some teeners over in ny said that theoretically it was an 's' dt having all options; however, not obviously really an 's' since P never had a 914 's'.
Then I read in my "how to restore and modify porsche 914" book (that i somehow had to spend 100$ to buy lol) that P WAS going to call the 73 2.0 "the 914s" , but then decided not to as they didnt want to affect their venerable 911s. interesting. |
type47 |
Feb 26 2013, 05:22 PM
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#8
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Viermeister Group: Members Posts: 4,254 Joined: 7-August 03 From: Vienna, VA Member No.: 994 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
The 2 previous owners are nearby the seller according to the ebay ad. You might ask them if they ever put a camshaft suited for carbs into the engine.
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rgolia |
Feb 26 2013, 05:40 PM
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#9
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GeoJoe Group: Members Posts: 704 Joined: 5-February 10 From: PA Member No.: 11,329 Region Association: North East States |
so you went for it...... excellent, you will enjoy it either way. I have had carbs on mine since 1982, it is a 74. It has never failed me, but there is a big difference if you rebuild with a cam to match the carbs. Way more pull than the stock motor could ever do. My FI system was a pain in the butt and I spent quite some time on the side of the road waiting for the car to start.....thus the carbs were the cheap fix of the times. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/driving.gif)
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Cupomeat |
Feb 26 2013, 05:49 PM
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#10
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missing my NY 914 in VA Group: Members Posts: 1,336 Joined: 26-November 07 From: Oakton VA Member No.: 8,376 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
I'd say I agree with ellisor;
1. Wash it and inspect everything. 2. Poke for rust in the obvious places 3. make a list of what you need to do for safety/preservation 4. make a list of what you WANT to do for fun 5. DEFINITELY put the FI back on if it is an unsplit 2.0l motor. You'll enjoy it more. Congrat and good luck. POST MORE PICS! |
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