Buying my first Porsche and everything after, part 1

Lyn Woodward

When I was a kid, the bubbly shape of my father’s Porsche 356s made me fall in love with cars. So, too, did the high, happy engine melody and the wind rushing through my hair as I sat on the Speedster’s precarious rear seats (sans seat belts, of course—this was the late ’70s after all). Porsche was a sacred part of my childhood that scored a mark on my heart, but life happened and I never thought I’d be in a position to buy one of my own.

An ember in the form of a neighbor’s 1965 Togo Brown 356C Coupe kept my hopes faintly alive for fourteen years as I passed it almost daily in our apartment’s communal parking garage. It was rough around the edges and it didn’t run, but I never stopped pining for that car.

My Porsche dream reignited after I made a pivot to become an automotive journalist. My resolve growing stronger, I even convinced her to let me to pull it out into the light for a wash. No matter how many times I asked about buying it, though, she demurred. I looked up its value in the Hagerty Price Guide and offered her what I thought would be a fair price considering the work it needed but, in her mind, it should have been worth tens of thousands more. And it would be, if it ran. But a clean 356 isn’t cheap, and values have shot up over 50% from the mid-2010s to today. There was no way I could afford that.

So, I did what a lot of buyers do after getting priced out of their dream car – I looked for alternatives. The 356s spoke to me, sure, but I always loved the look of the early 911s, too. I also knew that the 912 combined the 911 platform with smaller four-cylinder engine of the 356. Just like when it came out in 1965, the 912 offers a more affordable alternative. When I started checking out prices, I saw two interesting things: First, 912 values had recently risen, but not to astronomical heights. Second, I noticed that the bump in 912 prices seemed to have pushed up 911 prices of the same vintage. Or maybe it was the other way around. As those early 911s became more unattainable, the 912s caught the attention of interested buyers like me. Either way, emboldened with this knowledge, I was determined to strike quickly.

I made the mistake of setting notifications from auction websites for 912s. It didn’t take many dings in my email inbox to see that 912s started coming up for sale fast and furious, and with each increasing sold price or “reserve not met” notification it seemed prudent to get on with it if this was something I genuinely wanted.

porsche 912 offerup listing page
OfferUp

That urgency sent me to OfferUp, an online marketplace similar to Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist, but a lesser-known one. A good friend, who also happened to be a 912 owner, had found some great deals there. My initial search bore little fruit, but I was determined and kept at it until one popped up. It looked incredibly promising. Or, I should say, too good to be true. Sometimes people want to believe something so badly they’ll ignore red flags and reason. Scammers pray on that kind of emotion, and I got hooked. The bait in this case was a 1966 Porsche 912, advertised as a minor project and asking $8500.

After a morning of frenzied back and forth texts with the “seller” (which is a no-no, never give scammers your phone number), I made my way from Los Angeles to San Diego to meet the 912. I’d consulted with several friends, the kind of people who buy cars online as frequently as most people buy groceries, and even they didn’t know for sure if this Porsche was real or not.

porsche 912 project car brown side view from offerup listing
OfferUp

I’d spoken to the seller on the phone, but that’s not unusual. He had a California phone number, but that’s easy to fake. The brand-new seller profile and an odd, unsearchable name were two more red flags, and then there was this seller’s demand for a deposit.

Initially, he wanted a $1000 deposit as “more people were interested in the car.” Another no-no. Deposits are a bad sign. Thankfully, at this point my spidey sense finally started tingling. A grand is a big ask. I wasn’t willing to lose that much. I guess it didn’t tingle quite enough, though, because I was motivated and kept going. After a bit of back and forth, we agreed on $200. That was a sum I was willing to part with, and I had to see if there was indeed a Porsche 912 behind door number one.

(Helpful tip: If you do send money to anyone use PayPal. They are the only service that guarantees your money if you get scammed. With Venmo, Zelle, Cash App or others you have no recourse if you’re taken for a ride.)

The real car, located not in San Diego but in New York, and asking not $8500 but $34,000. Hemmings/Gullwing Motor Cars

It wasn’t until halfway to San Diego when a friend, who had come along for the ride, did what I should have done long before getting into this mess. One reverse image search later, we confirmed that the photos I’d been looking at weren’t for a 912 for sale in San Diego. They were actually from an East Coast dealer selling their 912 for $34,000. Tail between my legs, I bought my friend dinner and swore off Porsche shopping.

For about two days.

porsche 912 craigslist listing front three quarter
Craigslist

Another listing popped up, this one on Craigslist. It was a project. The silver paint looked sun-faded, almost like bare metal. There was no indication it ran and not much additional information, but one of my 912 consultants thought it might have promise. If it was a real car, of course. More importantly, the price was $20,000 less than cars I’d seen that were only slightly better-sorted. That would leave room for unexpected repairs.

Too good to be true again? Understandably, I felt hesitant. Fool me twice…as they say.

I contacted the seller, who immediately suggested I come see the car that afternoon. No deposit necessary. I went, and the seller gave me privacy as I inspected the car, including one of my trusty advisors over FaceTime. I didn’t feel pressured. The seller answered any questions he could, hadn’t done anything with the car since he bought it, and didn’t know much about it. He didn’t even know if it ran.

Another red flag? Who buys a car and never tries to start it?

Though it sat in a dirt lot behind a sun-beaten house in the San Fernando Valley—the LA suburb where all automotive rubber goes to die—there were many good things about this 912. The dash was brand new. The tires weren’t that old and held air once filled. The engine had all of its bits, and all of them moved, even if they were covered in spider webs. The crown jewel was that it had a brand-new floor pan. That meant minimal rust repair. Someone before this owner, then, had quit partway through a restoration but had gotten far enough along to embolden me. With each bit of good news I visualized the bottom line to a drivable car shrinking. Still, I tempered my excitement.

When he showed me the title, it didn’t have his name on it. Gulp. How is that possible? He didn’t register it because it was non-operational, and he didn’t want to pay registration while he worked on it. Fair enough, and some of my Porsche friends had apparently done this before, too. This seller was also a real, Google-able person.

No, this wasn’t the 356 of my childhood dreams and it certainly needed a lot of work, but this 912 was attainable. The seller gave me a couple of hours to consider, but within 10 minutes of leaving I called him back and said yes. Bill of sale in hand, I wired the money, picked up the keys and title, then called a tow truck to come get the car. “Holy smokes, I own a Porsche,” I thought as I followed the flat bed home. Then reality descended. What the heck do I do now?

(Read part two of Lyn’s 912 story here.)

Lyn Woodward

 

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Comments

    Keep us posted! I’m starting a 66 912 renew on a yard find myself. It was “outlawed” in the early eighties and had a 71 914 type 4 installed then……..

    In 1988, I purchased a beaten-up, baby blue 1968 Porsche 912 Targa Soft-back. It gradually became a beautiful vehicle with its shiny chrome bumpers. I was young, single, and living in Dallas, TX. It was loads of fun racing around with a pretty blonde in the passenger seat. But, the car simply ate money. Everything broke and everything cost lots of money to fix. Many dates ended with me getting the Blonde into a cab and the Porsche onto a tow truck.
    Then one fateful day… I was racing my Porsche around a newly paved future residential community. The sky was sunny and blue. Then I noticed smoke coming out of the vents and paint starting to bubble up on the front bonnet. I opened the front hood and experienced a “back-draft” of FIRE! My fire extinguisher did nothing. A 1968 Porsche is constructed of magnesium… which burns. The metal burns!
    Within 5 minutes, the local fire department arrived. By then the fire was so hot they could only watch it burn. The window glass even melted. My beautiful Porsche 912 was nothing but black ashes.
    The front trunk lining must have been oil and fuel-impregnated. A spark from the battery may have ignited that material. And as stated above… Magnesium burns. I highly recommend that you install an automatic chemical fire extinguisher within the front trunk and rear engine compartments. Learn from my costly mistake.
    After this experience, I asked my blonde wife (yes, she was one of the passengers) to never allow me to purchase another Porsche. A few times, she has had to intervene.
    Best of luck with your 912 money pit.

    Great article I’m hooked. These four cylinders are so easy to pull and redo the top end, carburetors valves, etc. your buddies will be glad to help with that(I would be on it in a hot minute) I recommend that route. The driveline and suspension on these cars are solid. The electrical system is good as well as long as it hasn’t been eaten by rodents. many have recommended a full brake system replacement & I agree. after all a Highpoint of the 911 and 912 was their excellent brakes, you might as well have them working beautifully. this is a survivor car(which is awesome). I would get it running well and keep the exterior patina. Maybe redo the interior once you get it running. find the best tires money can buy and put some modern shocks on it and it will be really fun to drive in the twisties. good luck and we’re all waiting for the next installment.

    Congrats. My comment pertains to the picture with your car on the flat bed with the bed tilted. I am a retired tilt n load operator, with a car like that, I would have not tilted the bed to that extent without you being in the drivers seat to ensure in case of equipment failure, it did not roll off the bed and run away. Believe me, I have seen it happen. Something to keep in mind next time. Good luck !!

    Hi Lyn – Congrats on your find. Looks like you’re off to a great start; ie the floorpan.

    Easy for me to mentally “project” my 25yo daughter into your situation. She grew up riding in all my cars, including my ‘67 911S. Not sure she’ll ever follow your path, but who knows?

    BTW: You’re located in the midst of arguably the highest concentration of Porchephiles on the planet. So you should easily find any needed help.

    Wishing you the best with your 912 !

    Just to set your mind at ease, and I suspect you already know this, the magnesium alloys used in auto and aerospace are a far cry from the magnesium ribbon your junior high chemistry teacher burned. While I would never dissuade anyone from having a two and half pound ABC in their vehicle ( they can look kind of cool mounted between the front seats) installing an automatic D class system in your 912 is like having your grandmother tell you to ‘take a sweater just in case’ in the middle of July. Flour is technically 35 times more combustible than gunpowder. Anyone who’s seen a flour mill explosion can attest to this. But that loaf of white bread in your kitchen isn’t a ticking time bomb.

    Pre inspection check by a respected appraiser or contact Porsche Club if America (PCA) and find someone in the area for assistance. If you are a novice or do not know that specific marque intimately, get someone that does. The “car” business is filled with all kinds of shysters. Good luck

    Congrats Lyn; looking forward to the continuing saga. To Mr. Parker’s excellent advice, I would just add a couple of tips:
    1) Remove the spark plugs and shoot a bit of motor oil into the cylinders before cranking it over. The lack of compression will be easier on all the components.
    2) Thoroughly inspect and ensure the integrity of all fuel lines and their junctions….and have a fire extinguisher handy the first few times you fire it up.
    I too bought the object of my childhood automotive lust a few years ago and it’s been mostly giggles and grins since; hope it’s the same for you. Good luck and enjoy!

    Thanks for sharing your tale, Lyn. Good for you on finding the car of your dreams. I’ll be looking forward to reading Part 2. Dr. John

    I am very much paralleling your journey ! I picked up a 1969 912 that has been sitting inside the owner’s body shop for over 25 years. The car didn’t run, but was virtually rust free ( a rareity in Pa ) and came w a spare 1965 engine. All rubbers are shot, brakes were locked up – but motor turns by hand.
    It’s a giant project.
    Life has been hindering my progress – but your story inspires me to get back to it .
    Good Luck !

    Well I am envious, having finished my 1978 Super Beetle Convertible restoration, I am in need of yes that 911/912. I think with the solid suggestions in ” some “of the posts here you will have a terrific ride for years to come. Yes work is something you can do, expertise when you need it is available but this is a terrific project car.

    Luckily with the 912 a trusted VW mechanic works well, that’s what I used up in nor cal – had a blast with that car too. Sold it for a 914-6 but still long for another 912. Good luck.

    Congratulations and am looking forward to part 2. Getting your first Porsche is always the hardest, then you wonder how you ever lived without one.

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