Site icon Brent Ozar

Selling My 911 on Cars & Bids, Bought a 944

Lemme set the stage with tracks from Just Say Yes, the 1987 Sire Records sampler:

You feel me? Okay, with that in mind:

I got a 1988 Porsche 944 Turbo.

This… is a 1988 Porsche 944 Turbo from Cars & Bids. Guards Red, pop-up headlights, phone dial wheels, Blaupunkt stereo. It just screams 1980s to me, like a great car to take to Radwood. It’s also kinda practical: the hatchback shape and rear seats means I can use it for shopping runs.

It’s only got about 20,000 miles – about 600 per year – and it’s been well cared for and stored, so the interior is ridiculously pristine:

It drives beautifully, doesn’t rattle or squeak at all. Feels like I stepped into a time machine, went back 34 years, and bought it off the showroom floor. I’d forgotten how good it feels to close a light 1980s car door and get that crisp mechanical noise. I’d also forgotten what it’s like to unlock doors with a key, hahaha!

It’s gloriously analog: I shift my own gears and the manual steering is so communicative. In a mid-80s comparison review, Car and Driver Magazine named it the best-handling imported car, and I can see why. I have a distinct nightmarish memory of trying to park a car without power-assisted steering, but when I took this one through a parking garage recently, I was delighted by how easy it was.

This car isn’t about straight-line speeds. The previous owner (super nice guy) upgraded the engine management chip from 217hp to 252, but I would still get smoked by a modern minivan in a stoplight race. A lot of folks modify their 944s and take them track racing, but that’s definitely not my plan for this one. The previous owner even felt guilty about putting miles on it – rightfully so – but this thing’s crying out for a road trip.

This was my first car purchase from Cars & Bids, and the experience was fantastic. After the auction closed, they reached out repeatedly to make sure the process went smoothly. It was so good that it got me thinking, so…

My 911 is up for auction on Cars & Bids.

Helmut is up on the auction block. I loved that car, loved the electronics upgrades, and owning a 911 Targa had been a lifelong dream. However, the COVID lockdowns and my 9 months in Iceland meant I never really had the chance to enjoy it. I only racked up 8,000 miles in 3 years.

It doesn’t make sense for me to keep this nice of a car sitting around in the garage. I’d rather let it go to someone else who will have the chance to make more memories with it. Plus, with the new car shortage, it just makes financial sense: there just aren’t a lot of 2018-2020 Targas available right now, and they’re all going for about the same price that they cost new a couple years ago. And heaven forbid you want a new one – my local Porsche dealer is asking $249,995 for a 2021 Targa, and it’s got 2,000 miles on it!

I’m taking a little bit of a leap of faith. The auction is no reserve, meaning whoever has the high bid at the end of the auction owns it, period. A lot of sellers set reserve prices on their auctions, and if the price doesn’t meet the hidden reserve, the high bidder doesn’t actually take the car home. I chose a no-reserve auction because it’s more exciting, and I trust the market. The car displays pretty well, and I think there will be a lot of interest in it.

Wanna buy it? Check it out on Cars & Bids.

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