As far as when I got the car, it was the fall of 2001, and I had just obtained my first job. I was saving to buy two things, my wife’s engagement ring and my car. I’d always heard the stories of guys having to sell their car when they got married, had kids, or for some other reason. I didn’t want to be one of those guys, so I came up with a plan. I figured if we drove away from our wedding in the car then it would have sentimental value and therefore I would be able to keep it forever. So far it’s worked.
I found the 911 in an autotrader and it was listed for $8500, now this was 2001 dollars so… But I went to look at it anyways. When I arrived it was love at first sight, it was a classic 1976, it was a 911 which I had always drooled over, and it wasn’t red or black. It was bright yellow and I had to have it. I did all the things a potential buyer shouldn’t do, I showed up, saw the car, fell in love, drove the car, I had done absolutely zero research on the car itself, or prices for older 911s, and made an offer without having a PPI done. Doh. Luckily, because it wouldn’t go into first gear, I talked the guy down to $7,000. Looking back that was still stupid money for a broken 911, but live and learn. I drove home the 50 miles starting it in 2nd. It never dawned on me that this may be a major problem. I was having a great time and grinning from ear to ear.
Luckily for me the transmission problem turned out to be the four bolts that mate the engine to the transmission were not tightened correctly. It was a shocker to get a $300 for a guy tightening a couple bolts. I thought, crap if I want to keep this thing I better learn to turn a wrench. I had very little car wrenching experience. I had done some oil changes, wired up some off road lights and car stereo stuff, but that was about it. And man would you guys had laughed at my tools, I had a small Craftsman 3/8 socket set and wrench, a pair of vice grips, a pair of pliers, a set of screw drivers, a rubber mallet, and a framing hammer. You gotta start somewhere right?
Well after getting the transmission fixed, I drove the 911 for about 8 months. As a note, we got engaged in August 2001 and were to be married in August 2002. I yearlong engagement worked out really well for me, and the 911. In the spring of 2002, while doing my first valve adjustment I found that the head studs were pulled. I found two were missing the barrel nuts entirely, one I located in the oil drain, I still never found the other one. Since the 2.7 is internet hated by all 911 people, I listened to others advice and instead of rebuilding the 2.7 I found a 3.0 out of an 81 SC and swapped it in. This was a huge learning experience for me, and for those that notice I did my first motor drop and left the transmission in the car... learn from my mistakes and don't do it this way.
I got the car up and running just in time for the wedding, and on August 17, 2002 we used it to drive away from the wedding and the reception. All my friends and family collectively held their breath to make sure it would start when we went to leave. Thankfully it did. This is the only pic I have of how the 911 was decorated for the wedding.
In 2007, while driving down the interstate I had a sudden loss of power. I got the 911 off the road and tried to diagnose what was going on. I eventually towed the car home and started a more thorough inspection to see if I could figure it out. After much, prodding and prying, I finally pulled the spark plugs, stuck a rod in the each hold, and turned the motor over by hand. Huh, that one rod isn’t moving… as it turned out a connecting rod broke and punched a hole in the case. WARNING next shots contain carnage… But, I essentially had a big yellow paperweight on my hands.
From the oil sump