1970
Porsche 917K Road Car
The
Porsche 917 is without a doubt one of the most iconic racing cars ever made.
The car dominated sports car racing in the early 1970’s and gave Porsche its
first overall win in the most prestigious endurance race in the world, the 24
Hours of Le Mans. The 917 shattered the competition on European circuits during
it short career. In fact, the German racing car was so successful it was simply
said being outlawed within a few years.
The
Porsche crossed the Atlantic where it became the most powerful racing car ever
made, and allegedly killed Can-Am racing. The Turbopanzer had an impressive
racing career, but little known is the fact that two street-legal models were
made arguably the first hypercars.
One
of the major sponsors for Porsche’s racing activities is Martini & Rossi.
The first racing car with the distinctive blue and red stripes of the Italian
distillery was the Porsche 917 which won the 1971 edition of the 24 Hours of Le
Mans. Another Porsche 917, with chassis number 030, was also used by Martini
Racing. But this car participated in one race only in which it failed to
finish. Following this race Porsche 917-030 was used for testing of anti-lock
braking systems before it was converted into a road car for Count Rossi.
The
racing colors were removed and the car was painted silver, mufflers were added,
and the interior was overhauled. These changes weren’t enough to deem to car
roadworthy in Europe, but Count Rossi avoided this by registering his car in
Alabama. Story goes the authorities in the American state provided Count Rossi
a license plate for his Porsche, as long if he didn’t bring the car to Alabama!
And
then there is the 21th built Porsche 917, which was delivered to AAW
Racing in April 1970 for the Interserie championship. The Finish racing team
initially painted the car red and yellow, but eventually opted for the famous
mauve and green psychedelic livery, hence its nickname “Hippie Porsche”.
Porsche 917-021 raced on circuits like the Nürburgring, Spa-Francorchamps and
Monza. The car was also entered in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, where it crashed. A
new chassis was installed and the season continued, which resulted in two
victories: the Grand Prix at the Keimola Motor Stadium (which was owned by AAW
Racing) in Finland and the Trophy of the Dunes at Zandvoort in the Netherlands.
After
the 1970 season Porsche 917-021 was dismantled, the engine and suspension were
installed in a Porsche 917 Spyder which would be used in racing the following
year. The bodywork and chassis were sold to a Porsche specialist in Karlsruhe,
southern Germany. These parts were collecting dust for three years until they
were bought by Joachim Grossman, a carpenter and restaurant owner, who wanted
to build a road-going Porsche 917. The incomplete Porsche was taken to his home
in the small town of Bad-Wildbad in the Black Forest, where Grossman started
restoring and modifying the car, a task which took over two years to complete.
The
body was stripped from its racing colors and repainted white, turn lights were
installed, and the original lightweight plexiglass windows were replaced by
more solid glass. The interior received an overhaul as well to make it slightly
more comfortable, it now featured white seats from made leather and blue floor
mats bearing the car’s designation “917”. Remarkably there was also a hair
dryer under the dashboard which served as a defroster.
An
engine was bought from Willi Kauhsen, who had driven the famous Porsche 917/20
“Pink Pig” at Le Mans. Furthermore a gearbox and suspension was installed, and
a more silent exhaust was fitted. Dunlop provided new tires suitable for road
use, those at the rear measured almost an impressive 50 cm in width.
Joachim
Grossman’s received an official manufacturers plate from Porsche, which meant
the Stuttgart-based company acknowledged his modified 917 as a real Porsche.
Eventually last hurdle was taken in June 1977 when the car passed the mandatory
roadworthiness test in Germany and received a license plate bearing “CW-K 917″.
The Porsche 917 was now ready to hit the Autobahn!
The
street-legal 917 had a dry weight of 970 kg and according to official documents
the detuned flat-twelve engine provided 550 horsepower at 7,500 rpm. The top
speed of the car was 320 km/h. By comparison, the fastest road-going car in
those day was the Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona with a top of 280 km/h. With the
possible exception of other modified racing cars it could be argued that the
two street-legal 917's were the fastest road-going cars in the world until the arrival
of the Ferrari F40 in 1987.
By
that time Grossman had already sold his Porsche to a collector in Florida, who
brought the car back to racing specs and used it in historical races. Nowadays
Porsche 917-021 resides in Belgium and has been restored from the ground up,
including the “hippie” livery. So the Count Rossi 917 remains the only
street-legal 917 in the world, but chances are slim to none that this car will
be spotted on the streets.
source
: gtspirit.com