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Photos of leather pouch, along with all books that accompany this car, are now in the gallery, including the fully stamped service maintenance book.
Following the enhanced measures put in place on March 23 with regard to Covid-19, we would like to assure all customers that as an online business we continue to operate, although our office is closed.
In order to help, we have a wide number of storage and delivery partners across the country who we can provide details to on request.
If there is further information you would like about any of our cars, we are happy to run individual live videos (using WhatsApp, Facetime or similar) of specific areas to your direction.
We thoroughly recommend all, new or old customers, to read our FAQs and our Trustpilot reviews for more information about our operation, and to help with your buying or selling decision. Any questions please contact us.
The boys from Stuttgart already had prior reputation for engineering the blimmin’ bejesus out of its automobiles, but the 1978 Porsche 928 took that to a whole new level. Lauded as a design masterpiece at launch, it swiftly took the European Car of the Year title and with it a multitude of plaudits.
Porsche knew that its all-new range-topping supercar was so far ahead of the competition that it advertised it with the slogan ‘nothing will come close for the next 10 years’. In truth, it was probably even longer than that.
There was however, one little problem. For those brought up on an air-cooled, rear-engined diet of fours and sixes (first in the 356 and then 911), its front-engined water-cooled V8 combo proved to be witchcraft of the unforgivable sort. Throw in its strictly grand touring personality and it was anathema to the company’s legion of sports car fans.
That was then, and this is now. Having fallen on hard decades, the 928’s dander has firmly been on the up for a while now. Those in the know, no longer judge it as a 911 replacement and instead appreciate it for the beauty of its engineering, sheer visual presence and colossal high-speed mile-devouring ability.
With a production run of almost 17 years there’s plenty to choose from, whether that’s a 240bhp 4.5-litre Pasha interior endowed original, a 4.7-litre 300bhp S or last-of-the-line 345bhp 5.4-litre DOHC GTS. Of course, there are multiple other iterations, choices of gearbox (80 per cent were autos) and special editions, but as a taster menu it’s enough.
Suffice to say, for many the very last of the breed is best. More speed, more power, bigger brakes, more engineering goodness, more toys, and better-integrated visuals – oh, I’ll have GTS please. And that’s exactly what we have here…







