Sold at UK Auction - 1965 LHD 911

A place to discuss Porsche cars (and others) for sale in the general market
Post Reply
DEEMAN
DDK forever
Posts: 672
Joined: Tue Jan 11, 2011 10:29 pm
Location: SCOTLAND

Sold at UK Auction - 1965 LHD 911

Post by DEEMAN »

I only noticed this yesterday, it was sold in January via Collecting Cars for £126,000 after a Euro195,000 rebuild :shock:

https://collectingcars.com/for-sale/196 ... 7L7w1-LQVU

Beautiully finished but full of errors (and non original engine).
Why do restorers keep making such painfully obvious non-original mistakes?
911hillclimber
Nurse, I think I need some assistance
Posts: 18910
Joined: Mon Mar 10, 2008 6:26 pm
Location: West Midlands

Re: Sold at UK Auction - 1965 LHD 911

Post by 911hillclimber »

Time and again you see this on all makes of classic car.

Restoration taken to the 100% level far exceeds the market value by a big margin.

Why bother doing a restoration?

hold the cash and just wait.
73T 911 Coupe, road/hillclimber 3.2L
Lola t 492 / 3.2 hillclimb racer
Boxster 987 Gen II 2.9
210bhp
Nurse, I think I need some assistance
Posts: 8047
Joined: Sat Feb 28, 2004 12:28 am
Location: Scotland

Re: Sold at UK Auction - 1965 LHD 911

Post by 210bhp »

DEEMAN wrote:I only noticed this yesterday, it was sold in January via Collecting Cars for £126,000 after a Euro195,000 rebuild :shock:
Why do restorers keep making such painfully obvious non-original mistakes?

Hi Ian

I think because the word ‘restoration’ has become synonymous with the word ‘rebuild’. There’s a world of difference but there are fewer people (parts manufacturers/rebuilders and purchasers) with your level of knowledge that ken the difference.


Regards
Mike
_____________________________
73 RS (Sold)
67 S
Mint T (Sold)
996 Turbo (Sold)
73 2.4E (home after 25 years) and Sold again :-(
73T targa (signal yellow project)
1953 Vauxhall Velox
914/6
1963 356B
https://www.mybespokeroom.com/
Post Reply