| Chris Welty die op een andere site die ik per toeval tegenkwam schreef: The Things We Do For Love
There is nothing like spring for reminding me how much I love 911s. There is no other car on earth quite like it, and owning one had always been one of my dreams. Having a 911, however, can frequently be a little less than dream-like. Readers of this column are familiar with my experiences at Watkins Glen, and my adventure with a blown CD box in the middle of Indiana, but actually these are not the kinds of things I am referring to. All cars break down from time to time, and I am convinced that a cared-for 911 is far more reliable than any other car.
No, the things I am talking about are in many ways rather peculiar to the 911, and some of them can only be experienced by someone who drives a 911 all the time. I suppose it is only fair to admit that owning a 911, for me, implies both owning much older ones and maintaining them myself. I have, therefore, no first-hand knowledge of what owning a new 911 is like, though normally that wouldn't stop me from writing about it anyway.
First of all, if you own a 911 you better learn to love oil. You better learn to really just adore oil. You should love to see it, breath it, get it on your hands, face, clothes, floor, kids, and especially under your fingernails. You also better love buying it, often. Very often. All the time. Consider having a local gas station install an oil pump so you can just pull in and fill it up (and, of course, love doing it)..
Loving oil is not really that hard a thing to do. An oil stained floor is obviously very attractive, and the oil itself, standing in beautiful spectral pools that shimmer like a gateway to some dark and magical other world, is one of those natural wonders that continues to surpass all of mans efforts to create beauty.
Be careful, however, that you don't start loving oil, and the sight of it, so much that you avoid purchasing kitty litter, or some other thing that will absorb oil off the floor. Despite the visual splendor, oil is, like most true art, fairly dangerous and objectionable in a number of ways, and generally a good thing to clean up.
This brings me to my next point. It is probably 0K not to love kitty litter so much as long as, like me, you gain an appreciation for cardboard.
I love cardboard. It is such a wonderful brown color. I love particularly the corrugations, and I really hate non corrugated card board, it is entirely useless, and has no character whatsoever.
My garage floor is essentially paved with nice brown corrugated cardboard, which is decorated with numerous lovely dark spots of fragrant oil. This kind of deviant artistic appreciation is characteristic of the true-hearted 911 owner. It would be hard to accurately convey my elation when I get brand new cardboard, and I imagine how it might look after a few drops of oil have leaked onto it.
I often find humor in novice 911 owners who worry when they notice their cars leaking oil. I suppose they don't have any cardboard that needs spotting, and they probably don't realize that leaking oil keeps the heat exchangers from rusting, and is also a sign that you actually have oil in the car. This may come as something of a surprise, but aside from the obvious decorative and rust preventing properties of oil, it also fills a fairly important role in the engine as a lubricant! Oil is an amazing substance, and there are plenty of good reasons to love it.
One of the truly unique design features of 911s is the lack of what in more recent years has come to be called "climate control." Climate control is one of those 90's politically correct terms; you have to call a guy with no legs "challenged", and you have to call a car with a heating system "climate controlled." Conversly you call a guy with two legs "unchallenged", and you call a car with no heat "cold."
Most 911 owners don't bother driving their cars when it is cold and will give explanations usually relating cold weather to rust. These kinds of excuses are actually lame attemps to avoid saying that their cars are climatically challenged. Clearly the true 911 owner knows that there is enough oil leaking to prevent any rust from forming, regardless of weather conditions.
Shivering in the drivers seat is certainly one of the more romantic parts of driving a 911, but families, spouses, and people-you-are-trying-to-impress usually aren't too fond of the experience. My autonomic nervous system has a built-in mechanism that forces the words, "How could you be cold?" out of my mouth as soon as my internal body temperature drops below 97 degrees.
This feature is particularly enhanced in SCs, where fairly unsympathetic Porsche engineers added a blower fan on the engine that would blow air over the heat exchangers regardless of engine speed. The fan they chose, however, lasts about two months, and when not working actually inhibits the airflow from the engine fan over the heat exchangers and into the passenger compartment. This has the effect of making the "improved" SC heating system colder than the unimproved heating system on earlier cars, and of course I love it.
For the benefit of slightly less enthusiastic passengers suffering from hypothermia, I have developed a neat little trick that usually brings on the heat in SCs: open the sunroof. If you have a 911SC without a sunroof then turn it into a "track car" (or sell it to someone who will) and get one that does so you can have heat. That is, heat for your passengers.
The sunroof trick only works when the car is moving and the windows are closed, and the rest of the heating system has to be intact. I'm a lot better at obfuscating than explaining things (which is why I became a college professor), but the reason this works is actually quite similar to the reason planes fly. The fast-moving air going past the sunroof sucks air out of your car, and if the heater vents are open it will draw air over the heat exchangers, which is what the non-functional heater fan was supposed to do in the first place. This, obviously, creates a multi-dimensional time/space vortex through which the particles of cold air are transubstantiated into particles of warm air from another universe. The result is an increase in entropy which is manifested as heat in your car.
The sunroof trick also has the advantage of making people think you're nuts. "I'm freezing! Why are you opening the sunroof?" You just smile enigmatically in response and watch their expression as they suddenly warm up.
This takes us full circle, because the expression of wonder at the flow of warm air is usually replaced by a wrinkled nose and the standard, "What's that smell?"
If your car is leaking properly, then the heat exchangers should have a nice sealing coat of oil on them, and when this oil heats up it produces the peculiar odor of burning oil, a fragrance that warms the cockles of the true 911 owner's heart, and sours the nostrils of various non-believers. Tobacco smokers can probably understand this experience, although I don't let anyone smoke in my car since I can't stand the smell.
All in all, a 911 owner, like the cars themselves, are a singular breed. Where others see problems and compromise, we see endearing qualities that make the experiencing of driving a 911 that much more enjoyable. | |