Porsche 944 ""one Owner"" on 2040-cars
Alberi, Italy
Body Type:Coupe
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:2.5 cc 4 CYLINDERS
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Dealer
Number of Cylinders: 4
Make: Porsche
Model: 944
Trim: COUPE' 2 DOORS
Options: Sunroof
Drive Type: FWD
Power Options: Air Conditioning
Mileage: 90,000
Exterior Color: Silver
Interior Color: Brown
PORSCHE 944 ONLY ONE OWNER FROM 1985, SERVICE BOOK FROM PORSCE, SERVICE DONE, TIMING BELT DONE AL 80.000 MILES, ORIGINAL AIR CONDITION, SUNROOF, NEVER RESTORED AND COMPLETELY ORIGINAL IN TOP CONDITION, IT RUNS GREAT, USE EVERYDAY, PERFECT SEATS, TIRES ABOUT NEW.
Porsche 944 for Sale
- 1989 porsche 944 base coupe 2-door 2.7l(US $4,750.00)
- 1988 porsche 944 base coupe 2-door 2.5l(US $2,500.00)
- 1986 porsche 944 2dr coupe turbo 5-spd
- Red manual very clean low reserve leather serviced must see 5 spd
- 1986 porsche 944 22k miles 5 speed manual rare collectible 2.5l carfax(US $17,950.00)
- One of a kind 1984 porsche 944 5 speed custom paint
Auto blog
Jaguar F-Type squares off against Porsche 911, Aston V8 Vantage with Chris Harris
Fri, 21 Jun 2013Chris Harris is back on the job, taking on really really difficult car questions like: Which enormously sexy and good-to-drive, high-performance convertible is the top of the heap? As one of the hottest cars in the luxury space right now, the Jaguar F-Type S is, of course, in on the action. Competition comes in the form of the Aston Martin V8 Vantage Roadster and the Porsche 911 Carrera S Cabriolet. Sun-loving CEOs who despise test-driving need look no further.
Scroll on below for a fully featured (with a running time of more than 20 minutes) comparison video. Harris does his best to entertain - in a typically nitpicky and made-up-British-words fashion - and the moving pictures are lovely to look at. Kick back, pour a pint and get your weekend started off right.
Drive-up bank robbery perpetrated with Cayenne and WRX
Sat, 14 Sep 2013Thieves carried out what appears to be a movie-script-perfect robbery of a bank in Sydney, Australia early on Friday morning, using two stolen high-performance vehicles in the process.
At around 11:15 AM local time, in near mid-day light, reports say that two men in masks smashed into the side of a Westpac bank in a confirmed-stolen black Porsche Cayenne. The perpetrators were armed with sledgehammers according to witness reports, and took only about five minutes to take what they were after inside of the bank.
The rapid getaway was executed in a Subaru WRX, also confirmed as a stolen vehicle, while witnesses snapped camera phone images of the illicit goings on. One Twitter user posted a few of the images to his social media feed; you can take a look at them in our small gallery below. Follow on down for the full video report, from The Sydney Morning Herald.
Autocar pits Porsche 911 Turbo S against Formula 4 racer
Fri, 20 Jun 2014There is a long-running argument among performance car fans: power vs. weight. In one corner you get cars generally with small engines making modest numbers but able to corner like they are telepathic, and in the other there are big thumping mills that are rocketships in a straight line but lumber in the turns. Autocar takes an interesting look this continuum in a recent video pitting a 552-hp Porsche 911 Turbo S against a 185-hp Formula 4 racecar. It hopes to find whether the Porsche's huge power advantage is enough to defeat the better grip and aero offered by the nimble racer.
There's no doubt that the Porsche is an utterly fantastic road car. The 911 Turbo looks mean with all of those intakes to suck in cool air, and it backs up the posture with huge amounts of grip available thanks to its all-wheel drive-system. However, at 3,538 pounds, it's a bit of a porker compared to the 1,135-pound Formula 4 car. The open-wheel car boasts just a 2.0-liter naturally aspirated four-cylinder from Ford and a six-speed sequential-manual gearbox, but it has loads of downforce to make up for it.
It shouldn't be a surprise that the formula car wins in the corners. After all, that's what it's made for. So do you think the massive horsepower superiority of the Porsche is enough to even the playing field? Scroll down to watch the video and find out, and even if you're not curious of the winner the 911 does some mean powerslides.