Background
The Porsche 911 first broke cover in 1963 and evolved over the years from a rather slender and spartan engineering oddity to the pumped-up, high-tech ballistic missiles that now carry the name and number.
The 911 3.2 Carrera arrived in 1984 as a replacement for the SC series. It revived the Carrera name for the first time since 1977 and introduced a new, higher-displacement engine - the 3.2-litre horizontally opposed flat 6-cylinder unit.
While the early cars were slow, pretty and quite delicate – and the later cars very aggressive, fast and almost indestructible – many enthusiasts think the 3.0-litre and 3.2-litre 911 from the late seventies and eighties is the purest evocation and the one that best blends classic looks with excellent performance and better-than-average reliability – and a well fettled 911 is a very quick and reliable car indeed.
And the car’s deadly reputation is, we think, largely undeserved. Yes, some people did find themselves flying through the air backwards at great speed into nearby trees and bushes. Often at shoulder height and usually in a 930 Turbo. But while the flat-six, air-cooled (actually oil-cooled, but never mind) aluminium engine might be hanging out behind the rear axle line like some monstrous pendulum, the handling is actually surprisingly benign - provided you don’t do anything really silly, obviously.
The 911 3.2 Carrera is still impressively quick, with 60mph coming up in 5.4 seconds (according to Autocar), thanks to a combination of engine power, low weight and excellent rear wheel grip. It sounds splendid, too. The absence of water-cooling means that the raw, virtually unmuted engine blares directly behind you, accompanied, of course, by one of the world’s great exhaust notes.
The interior is simple, tough and built to last, which means you can forgive the slightly wayward ergonomics and tendency to stick switches and knobs in places where no other manufacturer would think to stick them. It’s comfortable too, with supportive seats and one of the best driving positions in the business.
It even offers four-up motoring, although the rear seats are best left to the very small, the very young, the very acrobatic or the very masochistic.







