Great upload! Started as a birthday present from my girlfriend, turned into our wedding car, now 30+ years later it is still our fun car! Still living the dream, fabulous wife and a a lovely car; we both are showing wrinkles but our P is still smooth, all aging with dignity!! Thanks
I've owned the '86 3.2 (Guards Red) and an '83 SC 3.0 (Black) and both delivered that air cooled "sound" but the SC was more of a rock, the Carrera more of a track derivative. Toss up which one I miss more.
@@carsunknown in german we have two cases - female and male. “Die” is female, so die Faszination. Der is male, for example der Motor or der Porsche. In English it’s easier … you have only “the” …!
Great upload! Started as a birthday present from my girlfriend, turned into our wedding car, now 30+ years later it is still our fun car! Still living the dream, fabulous wife and a a lovely car; we both are showing wrinkles but our P is still smooth, all aging with dignity!! Thanks
You're timeless!
Lovely, thanks. I owned a 911SC for a couple of years in the late '80's. Most wonderful, visceral, experience of a car that I've ever driven.
Very artfull Edit. Great car and owner.
Thanks for watching! Please share with friends.
Great video, totally captured the soul and feeling :)
The difference between me and this guy, I didn't buy a 911 SC because I like old tings, I bought it because it was a 911 SC.
Nice video and nice car! I love our '86 3.2 and the sound it makes :) Very different than the 993 - more raw and growly. Franny
I've owned the '86 3.2 (Guards Red) and an '83 SC 3.0 (Black) and both delivered that air cooled "sound" but the SC was more of a rock, the Carrera more of a track derivative. Toss up which one I miss more.
Es ist ‚Die Faszination‘ 😉
Air cool life 😎
That my friend is a beautiful car
Great ! A really fascinating car. But my American friends - why DER Faszination ? Correct is DIE ….
What does "Die" mean in english?
@@carsunknown in german we have two cases - female and male. “Die” is female, so die Faszination. Der is male, for example der Motor or der Porsche. In English it’s easier … you have only “the” …!
@@carsunknown It doesn't matter when you've decided to try and write in German.
The only thing I disagree with is the preferred way to pronounce the name, 'Porsche'.
There is only one correct way to pronounce this name Its German I guess you dont know German
@@dougdarby3564 Do you understand what is meant by the term, 'preferred'?
@@dougdarby3564 In English, a proper noun can be spelled or pronounced anyway the writer wants hence "Der Faszination"