Hi all,
Just finished this 1/24 Tamiya Porsche 911 Turbo kit. A simple kit which almost snaps together without glue in places. All the parts fitted really well with minimal flash and light seam lines but the masking/painting of all the black trim was an absolute PITA and in the end I gave u trying to make them perfect - what you see is the best I could do. All in all I like the finished build (especially from 3 foot away!) and am particularly proud of the rear rear light bar where you can still see the PORSCHE lettering as on the real car.
This build is a representation of my best customers car which was imported from Germany into RSA in 1988. It came with some factory extras such as white leather interior with 22k gold badges. We subtly modified the vehicle boosting power to 325 BHP and painting the wheel centres Grand Prix White as per the coachwork.
In 1994 we drove 1600 km (approx 1000 miles) to Cape Town from Johannesburg to trade in the Porsche on his newest toy - a 1994 Lamborghini Diablo (kit in stash!) - but on the way down he decided to keep the Porsche so I got the honour of driving it back to Johannesburg in convoy with the Lambo. Up to 100 MPH there was very little between the 2 cars, between 100 to 140 MPH the Diablo edged ahead and after that it disappeared into the distance. Excluding numerous fuel and rest stops it took us just over 11 hours to do the trip. The Porsche is probably my favourite car of all time when driven within 80% of its limits, after that my driving skills were not good enough and the possibility of leaving terra firma on a bend was a real proposition. Acceleration was rapid until the on/off turbo kicked in around 3500 rpm when you were thrown back into the seat and could easily lose your grip on the steering wheel, the unassisted steering was sublime (only bettered by the 996 IMO) and handling below 80% limits "interesting". The owner still has both cars in his large stable.
Enough waffle, have a look at the pictures and comments/criticism welcome as usual.
Best Regards
Stefan








Just finished this 1/24 Tamiya Porsche 911 Turbo kit. A simple kit which almost snaps together without glue in places. All the parts fitted really well with minimal flash and light seam lines but the masking/painting of all the black trim was an absolute PITA and in the end I gave u trying to make them perfect - what you see is the best I could do. All in all I like the finished build (especially from 3 foot away!) and am particularly proud of the rear rear light bar where you can still see the PORSCHE lettering as on the real car.
This build is a representation of my best customers car which was imported from Germany into RSA in 1988. It came with some factory extras such as white leather interior with 22k gold badges. We subtly modified the vehicle boosting power to 325 BHP and painting the wheel centres Grand Prix White as per the coachwork.
In 1994 we drove 1600 km (approx 1000 miles) to Cape Town from Johannesburg to trade in the Porsche on his newest toy - a 1994 Lamborghini Diablo (kit in stash!) - but on the way down he decided to keep the Porsche so I got the honour of driving it back to Johannesburg in convoy with the Lambo. Up to 100 MPH there was very little between the 2 cars, between 100 to 140 MPH the Diablo edged ahead and after that it disappeared into the distance. Excluding numerous fuel and rest stops it took us just over 11 hours to do the trip. The Porsche is probably my favourite car of all time when driven within 80% of its limits, after that my driving skills were not good enough and the possibility of leaving terra firma on a bend was a real proposition. Acceleration was rapid until the on/off turbo kicked in around 3500 rpm when you were thrown back into the seat and could easily lose your grip on the steering wheel, the unassisted steering was sublime (only bettered by the 996 IMO) and handling below 80% limits "interesting". The owner still has both cars in his large stable.
Enough waffle, have a look at the pictures and comments/criticism welcome as usual.
Best Regards
Stefan
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