Automobile Magazine Homepage Subscribe Now

2004 Porsche 911 in Sacramento

This Vehicle Has Been Sold
Vehicle Specs
Price: N/A Drivetrain: Rear Wheel Drive
Year: 2004 Engine: Horizontal 6
Mileage: 36,048 Bodystyle: Coupes
Location: Sacramento,CA Doors: 2
Exterior: N/A Dealer Stock #: N/A
Interior: N/A VIN #: N/A
Transmission: Manual Seller Type: Dealer
About This Car
RWD, 40th Anniversary Ed, ABS (4-Wheel), Air Conditioning, AM/FM Stereo, Bose Premium Sound, Cruise Control, Dual Front Air Bags, Dual Power Seats, Front Side Air Bags, Full Leather, Multi Compact Disc, Power Door Locks, Power Steering, Power Sun Roof, Power Windows, Premium Wheels, Rear Spoiler, Telescoping Wheel
Professional Review

Just because a car is old doesn't mean it's slow. Yet there's a tendency for people to think that's the case, even if the car in question is a racer. If you show people a picture of an old racing car, such as this writer's own 1961 Lotus 20/22 Formula Junior, and tell them it will lap a track faster than a modern supercar, they tend to think you're nuts. Even automotive writers will look at a prewar racing car and wonder if the drum brakes actually stop the vehicle, to which you're tempted to reply, "No, you throw an anchor out the back."

We decided to see just how fast old racing cars actually are. Where do they get their speed compared with a modern supercar? Where on a track-and why-are they slower? How do different generations of racing cars compare with one another and with a supercar?

We assembled three great old racing cars and a Porsche 911 GT3 at England's Donington Park circuit. We chose cars that are the fastest of their breed today: an ERA (English Racing Automobile), to represent the prewar era; a Lotus 16, as the ultimate front-engined Formula 1 machine; and a Brabham BT11A from the early mid-engined period. We used our Racelogic VBox to analyze acceleration, braking, and cornering performance objectively, and we drove all four for subjective comparisons.

1935 ERA R4D

At the end of the 1930s, the fastest racing cars on the planet were German: the Mercedes-Benz W154 and the Auto Union D-type. Nowadays, however, for a number of reasons, they would struggle to keep up with Mac Hulbert's sinister black ERA, chassis R4D, around Donington.... Read full article

Disclaimer

All vehicle information displayed on this web site is supplied by the offering dealer or other third parties. This site is not responsible in any way for the accuracy or completeness of such information. This site provides this classified listings service and materials without representations or warranties of any kind, either express or implied. All prices and specifications are subject to change without notice. Prices may not include additional fees such as government fees and taxes, title and registration fees, finance charges, dealer document preparation fees, processing fees, emission testing and compliance charges. Please contact seller for updated information.
 
Twitter
Get Adobe Flash player
APPAREL, GIFTS & MORE!