I normally fail pretty hard at keeping build threads going, but I'm currently down following ACL surgery so maybe I'll stay on top of it this time. At any rate, it will hopefully serve as some reference for 924 and CIS stuff in the future. I've been down the rabbit hole, and unfortunately it seems like peak 924 was 10-20 years ago. Lots of dead links and sites lost to the rise and fall of geocities and the age of the DIY knowledge share website.
This all starts with my 2000 Tahoe Limited. Great truck, but I also have a GMT400 K1500 and my GMT800 Suburban 2500, so the Tahoe went on the block...and sat. For months. Though I'm ultimately trying to thin out my fleet, I eventually started looking for trade opportunities, and I found a Facebook ad for an old 924 "runs, been sitting for years. Needs maintenance. Will trade." I'm an E30 guy at heart, but I do love 924s and still have the 944 project that I got from DrBoost that I continue to chip way at. So, long story short, I loaded up the Tahoe, dragged it to Iowa, and came back with a 924.
Does this count as downsizing? I'd like to think so.
In the process of the trade, I learned quite a bit of the back story of the car, and suddenly a trade-and-flip started to look like a car I want to save. I'm such a sucker.
The original owner bought the car in Illinois in 1981 as a leftover 1980 model. they drove it up until April of 1991 when it went to the second owner in Davenport, Iowa. This owner drove it basically as a sunday car to the golf course until unfortunately dementia started to take hold. He lost the ability to drive, and the car was tucked away, forgotten, in his garage. It sat there for 16 years.
A family member eventually took some interest in the car, working to get it running again. They did brake lines, replaced/cleaned/repaired much of the fuel system, and replaced all the fluids to get it running. They drove it all of about an hour and a half before, as they put it, "turns out Porsche doesn't automatically mean fast". Interest quickly waned, along with family impracticality of a two seater.
So, completing the trade, I'm now the third owner of this car, which has what appears to be a true 40,000 ish miles on it. The mechanical condition of the car suggests that it probably didn't roll the 5 digit odometer, but I suppose it is possible. If the Pirelli P6 tires aren't original, they are certainly period-correct tires with the 1980s version of the tread pattern before this tire design was revamped.
The car is straight, but filthy. Layers of dust and dirt, plenty of scratches where it looks like boxes were stacked on the body, and a strange amount of crazing on the clear coat. It's a very nice example of a model that's usually pretty ragged these days, but not so nice that I won't want to drive it.
The interior is very clean, and while the dash is cracked, it isn't nearly as bad as most of these are. Nearly everything works, with the exception of the fuel gauge and a few burned out lights. It does run and drive, though it does need a fair bit of deferred maintenance which is what a lot of this thread will be about.
My goals are simply to bring it back to its former glory and make it a good driver's car. No engine swaps, probably no forced induction. I have other cars that meet those needs.
It fits right in next to my E30s - that 325es is also a bit of a rolling restoration at the moment.