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| Presentation | 1964 Porsche 911 |
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In November 1964 the Porsche 911 went into production and had a production run length second only to the Volkswagen Beetle. It was originally known as the Porsche 901 but another car company apparently had the corner on three digit designations with a zero in the middle so Porsche switched to the 911 designation. |
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| Pictures | The 911 was a rear-engine, rear-wheel-drive vehicle with an overhead cam, air-cooled flat-six cylinder engine. The 2.0-L engine had an output of 96 kW (130 hp) at 6100 rpm with a maximum torque of 174 N•m (128 lb•ft) at 4200 rpm. It had a bore of 80 mm (3.15 in) and stroke of 66 mm (2.6 in) with a compression ratio of 9.0:1. The air-cooled boxer engine had a cooling fan connected to the alternator and used a dry sump lubrication system that helped eliminate crankshaft splashing losses at high engine speeds. The engine used aluminum cylinders with iron liners and alloy pistons. The transmission was a Porsche synchromesh 5 speed manual transmission. The chassis was a welded steel box frame with an independent front suspension that used struts and lateral arms. Separate longitudinal torsion bars were used for the front along with MacPherson struts. The rear suspension was also independent and used trailing arms and double-acting shock absorbers. Power was transmitted to the rear wheels via jointed halfshafts. |
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The Porsche 911 used ZF rack and pinion steering with a steering ratio of 16.5:1. This was a new system for the 911 because most vehicles of this era used worm-and-gear steering systems. The 911 employed a four-wheel disc brake system of the single circuit type. However, the braking system was not the racing system used in previous Porsche models. The curved safety glass windshield was a feature not common to most vehicles. |
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An interesting option for cold weather motoring was an auxiliary gasoline heater to supplement the passenger compartment heat from the air-cooled engine. |
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Specifications |
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Base price: |
$---- (1964) |
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