> On June 16, Chris Kennedy wrote:
> > > Well, since you mentioned it, the '95 car I mentioned above is a
> > > Porsche 911...a car that has changed very little over the years since
> > > its introduction.
> > I suppose it depends on what you define as "changed very little". '71, '73,
> > '74, '76, '78, '82 and '85 all introduce significant chassis changes.
> > The liquid-cooled current production engine has only passing resemblance
> > to the air-cooled precursors and the transaxle has seen radical changes.
> > About the only thing that is really constant about the car is the shape,
> > the transmission-in-front-of-differential-in-front-of-engine-layout
> > and the organization of the engine as a boxer-six. Oh, and the location
> > of the ignition on the left-hand side of the wheel :-)
> > Look hard enough and almost every bit has been radically revisited, which
> > coupled with the amazing ability to graft in stuff from the 930/34/35 and
> > even a few 928 bits, makes for *all sorts* of fun for those of us who get
> > geeky over 911s... :-)
> When I say "changed very little" I meant compared to certain other
> models of car we see on the roads these days. Certainly there are
> dozens to hundreds of changes every year or couple of years...I have
> an '83 and a '95, and they're very different cars. But, to the
> non-911-geek, to see them sitting next to each other in a parking
> lot, they're damn near identical.
Well, compared to some car makers, who offer new shells every
other year, while still 1960s technology is below the different
colored sheet metal, Porsche is way conservative ... Still I
prefer a new chasis design over colored bumpers (Thats maybe
why I still love the CX :)
Gruss
H.
--
VCF Europa 2.0 am 28./29. April 2001 in Muenchen
http://www.vintage.org/vcfe
http://www.homecomputer.de/vcfe
Received on Wed Jun 21 2000 - 11:48:34 BST