Anyone for Vintage?

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Godfather

Active member
Anyone here favor the highly analogue and vintage automotive world? Show us your ride.

For me, I’ve restored many vehicles, and done the whole “factory” stock thing, and its cool, but you have to accept your ride will underperform a modern day, bare bones, velour seated, basement offering piece of shit from Asia. Conversely, you can take that substrate of ancient beauty, not designed on CAD, and infuse it with some modern day performance and capability, and maybe not even show the world whats there, aka a Resto-Mod.

My most recent creation: a 1956 Porsche 356A, which historically was powered by a flat four air-cooled 40hp horizontally opposed push rod motor. My build thesis was what if the boys at Porsche decided to build a gentlemen’s GTS, all the power, all the luxury, built to track on Saturday, built to drive to the office on Monday, this would be it. We are still in beta trials, working out the bugs, but this has a 260+hp dual overhead 4 cylinder 2.7L Polo motor, effectively a 4 cylinder 911 (993 era) motor, coupled with a 4 speed gear box from a 930 turbo, with modern discs at the corners, and a ton of tech under the skin.

Tell me your thoughts on vintage rides, show us some pics.

B76CBE16-E46A-435F-9501-55C45D21665C.jpegIMG_3727.jpeg
 
That's a beauty!
I'm curious what the interior looks like. Did you keep it classic or add digital comforts?

I'm still working on my 80 series Cruiser. The 4.5 liter inline six, with fulltime 4WD makes me want to do an LS swap but the other half of me wants everything stock.

Nice ride, amigo.
 
80 Series Cruiser, now I have massive vintage envy - bravo my friend, one of my targets.

As to interior, always analogue on the surface, but digital underneath. I have a pretty strong blue tooth driven sound system, you just can’t see it. Gauges are old school, but cleaned up. Dash clocks, one of my things, built into a nacelle with red LED wash lights above. Old tach turned into an external temp gauge on the navigator side. Four cell gauge with oil level, oil temp, oil pressure and fuel. The dash is off a 1952, cut it in because it’s cooler than the 1956, but was surgery.

Very old school look and feel, but today level performance.

The tach takes me to over nearly 7k revs, which the motor will do without a hickup - this thing has a vintage GT 100L tank in the hood, and it sucks fuel like you would not believe.

The center rally clock, all vintage Heuer, again my signature detail, is a 4 number Master Timer, and I have the provenance from it being used in Angola, obviously pre-conflict.

IMG_1687.jpegIMG_5537.jpeg
FullSizeRender.jpegIMG_3555.jpeg
 
Anyone here favor the highly analogue and vintage automotive world? Show us your ride.

For me, I’ve restored many vehicles, and done the whole “factory” stock thing, and its cool, but you have to accept your ride will underperform a modern day, bare bones, velour seated, basement offering piece of shit from Asia. Conversely, you can take that substrate of ancient beauty, not designed on CAD, and infuse it with some modern day performance and capability, and maybe not even show the world whats there, aka a Resto-Mod.

My most recent creation: a 1956 Porsche 356A, which historically was powered by a flat four air-cooled 40hp horizontally opposed push rod motor. My build thesis was what if the boys at Porsche decided to build a gentlemen’s GTS, all the power, all the luxury, built to track on Saturday, built to drive to the office on Monday, this would be it. We are still in beta trials, working out the bugs, but this has a 260+hp dual overhead 4 cylinder 2.7L Polo motor, effectively a 4 cylinder 911 (993 era) motor, coupled with a 4 speed gear box from a 930 turbo, with modern discs at the corners, and a ton of tech under the skin.

Tell me your thoughts on vintage rides, show us some pics.

View attachment 79View attachment 80
good lord this thing is beautiful!
 
Anyone here favor the highly analogue and vintage automotive world? Show us your ride.

For me, I’ve restored many vehicles, and done the whole “factory” stock thing, and its cool, but you have to accept your ride will underperform a modern day, bare bones, velour seated, basement offering piece of shit from Asia. Conversely, you can take that substrate of ancient beauty, not designed on CAD, and infuse it with some modern day performance and capability, and maybe not even show the world whats there, aka a Resto-Mod.

My most recent creation: a 1956 Porsche 356A, which historically was powered by a flat four air-cooled 40hp horizontally opposed push rod motor. My build thesis was what if the boys at Porsche decided to build a gentlemen’s GTS, all the power, all the luxury, built to track on Saturday, built to drive to the office on Monday, this would be it. We are still in beta trials, working out the bugs, but this has a 260+hp dual overhead 4 cylinder 2.7L Polo motor, effectively a 4 cylinder 911 (993 era) motor, coupled with a 4 speed gear box from a 930 turbo, with modern discs at the corners, and a ton of tech under the skin.

Tell me your thoughts on vintage rides, show us some pics.

View attachment 79View attachment 80
Holy shit, this is what my dreams are made of. Can't fit 4 kids in the back...Sold! I'll take it LOL
 
80 Series Cruiser, now I have massive vintage envy - bravo my friend, one of my targets.

As to interior, always analogue on the surface, but digital underneath. I have a pretty strong blue tooth driven sound system, you just can’t see it. Gauges are old school, but cleaned up. Dash clocks, one of my things, built into a nacelle with red LED wash lights above. Old tach turned into an external temp gauge on the navigator side. Four cell gauge with oil level, oil temp, oil pressure and fuel. The dash is off a 1952, cut it in because it’s cooler than the 1956, but was surgery.

Very old school look and feel, but today level performance.

The tach takes me to over nearly 7k revs, which the motor will do without a hickup - this thing has a vintage GT 100L tank in the hood, and it sucks fuel like you would not believe.

The center rally clock, all vintage Heuer, again my signature detail, is a 4 number Master Timer, and I have the provenance from it being used in Angola, obviously pre-conflict.

View attachment 81View attachment 82
View attachment 83View attachment 84
I don't think I've ever seen the interior. Now I like it even more. Perfect job, my bru.
 
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