Model Collector – August 2019

(Barré) #1

48 http://www.modelcollector.com | august 2019


| 914 and more


to Ferry Porsche on his 60th
birthday, coincidently also
in September 1969. An even
wilder development was that
of dropping an eight cylinder
908 racing engine into a much
modified 914 body known
as a 918 or 914 S.
Not all 914s, though, went
to young, or young at heart,
sports car enthusiasts. As a
successor to service weary
Porsche 356 cabriolets, the
914’s Targa configuration also
found favour across Europe
with many police forces – most

the 914’s successor came in
the form of a model that had
been developed for, but which
was later rejected by Audi,
becoming instead the first
water-cooled Porsche
production model – the 924.
That, however, didn’t
happen until after further
exploration on the 914 theme
had been undertaken by
Porsche, who producing a
limited series of fixed roof
coupe, dubbed the 916,
versions. A metallic silver
3.0-litre 916 was presented

of 914 production also saw
plaid cloth facings to the seats
colour coordinated to the
exterior paint. The first
generation V W Scirocco’s were
by then also passing along
Karmann’s production lines
and using the very same
paint colours and similar
plaid trim themes. The
introduction of that ‘new
generation’ water cooled V W
sports coupé sounded the
death knell for not only the
Karmann Ghia but the 914 as
well in the V W model range.
As for the Porsche catalogue,

identical to the V W ones but
differed in having a unique
ET40 offset, 4- and 5-bolt alloys
by Mahle (usually affectionate-
ly described as the ‘gas-burner’
style), and finally two more
4-bolt style alloys – the ‘Baby
Fuchs’ and a Pedrini version
similar to that of the Mahle.
Paint colours offered on
the 914 included some of the
brightest, quintessentially
70s, shades used on European
production Volkswagens.
Indeed, many of them were
unique to cars manufactured
at Karmann. The closing years


Authentically detailed Minichamps 914/6 (GT)s
and representative 916 in black.

Schuco’s 914 in L13M Saturngelb with Mahle alloys (left) and Minichamps’ L65K
Ravennagrün with Lemmerz steels.

Minichamps’ 1970/71 914GT, in both cases driven by Björn Waldegaard.
Free download pdf