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> 1978 Porsche 924, Want opinions
drewvw
post Sep 30 2007, 07:26 PM
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Hello all. Despite the fact that my wife has put a one vintage car limit on me for the time being, the car gods are ignoring her wishes and throwing all sorts of interesting "deals" my way.

One in particular is my buddies 1978 924, affectionately known as the "copper cruiser". He's moving to california and is just looking to out from underneath it for cheap, how cheap i am trying to figure out.


What I know:

1) Needs a waterpump/timing belt. From what i hear its about a 4 hour job.

2) Early 924s aren't particularly fast or handle well, i would buy this car for soul factor primarily. It would be a more fun commuter than my Volvo 240.


What I'd like is some opinions on the car: what goes wrong, is it reliable enough, decent car if i can get it dirt cheap and throw a water pump in there?


Thanks all...Drew


p.s. There's a pic of it in my blog....link in my signature
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Pat Garvey
post Sep 30 2007, 07:34 PM
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Drew,

I had a '76 for 4 years. Yeah, it was a bit of slug but I take issue with the handling. Some decent shocks & bars turned into a really fun autocross car. Other than minor performance mods, it served me well. Poor 924's get too much bad press, sorta like some "other" 4 cylinder Porsche we all know of.

I would speak to the wife & try to convince her that it could be a very good daily driver all seasons of the year (for you, not her). Oh, I forgot to mention - the factory A/C system really sucked.
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ClayPerrine
post Sep 30 2007, 07:44 PM
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I had a 79 back in the middle 80s.


Attached Image



It is the only car I ever named that I don't regret selling....



AC worked really well though.
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drewvw
post Sep 30 2007, 08:10 PM
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wow, talk about polar opposite responses...

Clay, what the hell happened...just a maintenance nightmare or what?
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orthobiz
post Sep 30 2007, 08:19 PM
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Has nothing to do with the 924 itself, but I always viewed it as the "914 killer." AND it was anodized to slow down the evil rust we still dread today in our beloved little teeners.

Just my bad attitude. By the time the 944 and 968 came out, all was forgiven!

Paul
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cassidy_bolger
post Sep 30 2007, 08:20 PM
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I have never owned one, so my advise is worthless, but I say get it! How can a hatchback that is also a Porsche not be a better daily driver than a volvo 240?

I wonder if you can drop 944 engines into those?

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Cap'n Krusty
post Sep 30 2007, 08:23 PM
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Does your boat need an anchor that big?

They EAT cams and lifters. The door hinges tear away from the body. A clutch job takes all day, and that's with a lift. Broken exhaust studs are common, and that, more often than not, requires the head to be removed. If it's a 4 speed, they EAT the rear mainshaft bearing, which requires the tranny to be removed, and 6-7 hours more labor to replace unless you can find the spacial tool(which is close to 30 years old). I have the tool, BTW. If it's an automatic, the driveshaft coupler is around $1200, and they break all the time.

The Cap'n
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Pat Garvey
post Sep 30 2007, 08:29 PM
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QUOTE(Cap'n Krusty @ Sep 30 2007, 08:23 PM) *

Does your boat need an anchor that big?

They EAT cams and lifters. The door hinges tear away from the body. A clutch job takes all day, and that's with a lift. Broken exhaust studs are common, and that, more often than not, requires the head to be removed. If it's a 4 speed, they EAT the rear mainshaft bearing, which requires the tranny to be removed, and 6-7 hours more labor to replace unless you can find the spacial tool(which is close to 30 years old). I have the tool, BTW. If it's an automatic, the driveshaft coupler is around $1200, and they break all the time.

The Cap'n

Wow, that's scary stuff. Happy I only kept mine for 4 years!

Did enjoy it (in the slow lane) while I had it, except for the A/C. Not one of my former cars that would be on the A list for re-purchasing though. Now, my '86 GTI......oooo baby! Can't forget my 65 Dart GT, or my triple black '70 Chevelle, or.........
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drewvw
post Sep 30 2007, 08:45 PM
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That was a sobering post, as per usual with the Cap'n....

if i bought it, i would just drive it for awhile and sell it or dump it if it blew up on me.
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Root_Werks
post Sep 30 2007, 09:13 PM
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I had an 81' for a while. I thought it was a nice car. (IMG:style_emoticons/default/confused24.gif)
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orthobiz
post Sep 30 2007, 09:23 PM
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QUOTE(Pat Garvey @ Sep 30 2007, 10:29 PM) *

Now, my '86 GTI......oooo baby!


Hey! I had a red 86 GTI!! Traded it in for a Corrado. On the way to the dealer the oil light came on. AND it had a buzzer! So I buzzed for about 60 miles to trade it in. The dealer didn't care a bit.

Sorry. Mini-hijack.

Paul
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woobn8r
post Sep 30 2007, 09:24 PM
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QUOTE(Cap'n Krusty @ Sep 30 2007, 08:23 PM) *

Does your boat need an anchor that big?

They EAT cams and lifters. The door hinges tear away from the body. A clutch job takes all day, and that's with a lift. Broken exhaust studs are common, and that, more often than not, requires the head to be removed. If it's a 4 speed, they EAT the rear mainshaft bearing, which requires the tranny to be removed, and 6-7 hours more labor to replace unless you can find the spacial tool(which is close to 30 years old). I have the tool, BTW. If it's an automatic, the driveshaft coupler is around $1200, and they break all the time.

The Cap'n

(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif)

If you want an inexpensive classic car to commute and have fun.... go find an '84 GTI 1.8...IMHO.

S.
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911quest
post Sep 30 2007, 10:29 PM
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Try to find a stock 83-84 GTI in decent shape.....
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jd74914
post Sep 30 2007, 10:35 PM
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QUOTE(911quest @ Oct 1 2007, 12:29 AM) *

Try to find a stock 83-84 GTI in decent shape.....


(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif) they are fun to drive (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
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Cap'n Krusty
post Sep 30 2007, 10:59 PM
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QUOTE(jd74914 @ Sep 30 2007, 09:35 PM) *

QUOTE(911quest @ Oct 1 2007, 12:29 AM) *

Try to find a stock 83-84 GTI in decent shape.....


(IMG:style_emoticons/default/agree.gif) they are fun to drive (IMG:style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)


I'm likely to buy the first nice one I find for sale ................ IF I can beat my wife to it! The Cap'n
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911quest
post Sep 30 2007, 11:06 PM
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I think they built 15,000 of them and half are left are 3/4ths. of them have been "tuned".... fartcans ,strutbars, etc.
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914-8
post Sep 30 2007, 11:19 PM
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Those early 4 speed 924's are just plain vile.

That a porsche badge was put on that POS is one of the rare sad moments in Porsche history that we should try to let die, and never speak of again.
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jd74914
post Sep 30 2007, 11:19 PM
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QUOTE(911quest @ Oct 1 2007, 01:06 AM) *

I think they built 15,000 of them and half are left are 3/4ths. of them have been "tuned".... fartcans ,strutbars, etc.


strut bars are ok . . . its the fartcans and pepboys "racing seats" that kill them (IMG:style_emoticons/default/dry.gif)
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i love porsche
post Sep 30 2007, 11:40 PM
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ive got an 88 924S, not the same car, but its got some similar parts. i know the engine in the 924 is easier to work on, plus its not an interference engine, so a broken timing belt will not be the death of the car. i drive my car every day, and have driven it in the snow with summer tires on multiple occasions (yeah im crazy) and i love it. the 924 will be underpowered, but the handling is great. if your looking for cheap fun, id say go for it. see if there is a rennlist member who is 924 savy who will do a ppi for you, that cant hurt
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ClayPerrine
post Oct 1 2007, 08:27 AM
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QUOTE(drewvw @ Sep 30 2007, 09:10 PM) *

wow, talk about polar opposite responses...

Clay, what the hell happened...just a maintenance nightmare or what?



QUOTE(Cap'n Krusty @ Sep 30 2007, 09:23 PM) *

Does your boat need an anchor that big?

They EAT cams and lifters. The door hinges tear away from the body. A clutch job takes all day, and that's with a lift. Broken exhaust studs are common, and that, more often than not, requires the head to be removed. If it's a 4 speed, they EAT the rear mainshaft bearing, which requires the tranny to be removed, and 6-7 hours more labor to replace unless you can find the spacial tool(which is close to 30 years old). I have the tool, BTW. If it's an automatic, the driveshaft coupler is around $1200, and they break all the time.

The Cap'n




The Cap'n is right.. biggest piece of (IMG:style_emoticons/default/stromberg.gif) ever to wear the Porsche badge. I had one with a 5 speed, and it was the one with the same shift pattern as the 901 in a 914. In the time I owned it it ate 3 clutches, 2 torque tubes, 5 pilot bearings, all of the shift linkage and the console from the PO shifting it with broken bushings, the head gasket, 2 water pumps, and a LOT of my time doing maintenance. It got marginally cheaper after I figured out that I could tell the local counterman at FLAPS that it was an Audi Fox engine.

The body design was OK. After Porsche scrapped the whole drivetrain and made their own (aka the 944) it became a decent car.
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