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Can Porsche’s 964 Carrera 4 Be As Fun To Drive As The C2?

In the world of aircooled Porsches, the 964 has traditionally been viewed as the unwanted child of the bunch. For years this was a Porsche that was seen as too similar to the earlier Carrera 3.2, and not quite as good as the 993 that followed it. It was a weird middle-ground kind of car that didn’t have a following like the others had garnered. As the prices of 993s and impact-bumper Porsches have gone through the roof lately, the 964 was seen as the last remaining ‘inexpensive’ air-cooled, and prices started to go up. If you look at prices today, 964 Carrera 2 Coupes have followed a “hockey stick” type trajectory, while their Carrera 4 and Cabriolet cousins have risen only slight. So the question is, can a 964 Carrera 4 actually be any good to drive?

The Porsche featured in this video is stellar to look at, featuring motorsport-inspired visuals like the BBS wheels, Toyo R888 tires, bumper-mount brake ducts, a set of sport bucket seats, and a proper roll bar. It’s a good indication of what can be done with the 964 Carrera 4 chassis to make it a better performance machine.

It is worth noting that Larry Kosilla of Ammo NYC has also built a Carrera 4 track car. Now, Larry’s reasoning was to increase his 964’s year-round usefulness in the North East where he lives, and is forced to drive in snow, every winter. Larry’s Porsche is possibly the best of all worlds, creating a great track car that can be used all summer, then simply raise the suspension a bit and put the 964 on proper snow tires, and you’ve got a great 4-wheel-drive winter car that still sounds like a Porsche.

We don’t suspect Carrera 4 values will stay deflated for long, soon following their C2 brothers up the money spectrum, so if you were looking at buying one, it’d be better to bite that bullet sooner rather than later. When correctly set up, 964s can be great track-focused sports cars, and still manage a bit of inclement weather when the going calls for it.

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Bradley Brownell:

View Comments (3)

  • I'm a newbie. Will someone please explain what this means: "As the prices of 993s and impact-bumper Porsches have gone through the roof lately..." What years are we talking about for 964s and 993s and what years are the "impact-bumper Porsches"?

    • There are a few generations of 911, and I hope this comment will clarify that for you.
      Long-hood 911s were built between 1963 and 1973.
      The "Impact Bumper" was added in 1974, and encompasses all cars from 74 through 1989. That era is split apart as the "Mid-year" cars from 74-77, the "911 SC" from 78-83, and the "Carrera 3.2" from 1984 to 1989.

      The 964 was introduced in 1989 and ran through 1993.

      The 993 was the final air-cooled 911, introduced in 1993 and ran through 1998.

      I hope this helps.

  • Well here in Australia the C4 sits at similar pricing as a c2 , a good unit will top at $150,000 Aud

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