--White with Orange trim and wheels, Black upholstery, Charcoal
carpeting and Black removeable targa top, 2.0 Liter 4-cylinder
engine, 5 speed manual gearbox, Restored. Known officially
as the 914 Limited Edition, or LE, Porsche imported 500 cars with
Black as the primary color and 500 in Light Ivory. The Black cars
all featured Sunflower Yellow rocker panels, bumpers, spoiler, and
wheels, earning the car the "Bumblebee" nickname. The White cars
were accented in the same places with Phoenix Red, a nearly orange
color, giving rise to the "Creamsicle" name. Along with
the regular Appearance Group option (fog lamps and center console
with clock and additional gauges) a $300 option, the LE package set
buyers back another $320. What they received for their money were
add-ons to make quite the slick-looking 914, a special interior,
alloy wheels, a spoiler below the front bumper, front and rear
anti-roll bars and one of two unique paint combinations,
highlighted by a "negative" stripe that spelled out "Porsche" just
above the rocker panels. Although Porsche made a 1.8-liter
engine available as the base engine in the '74 914, all LE's came
equipped with the 2.0-liter flat-four a heavily revised version--by
Porsche--of the Volkswagen powerplant and first offered in 1973.
Small increases in bore and stroke yielded a 1,971-cc displacement
against the base 1,795-cc engine, resulting in a robust 91 hp in
U.S. trim, a considerable upgrade over the 72.5-hp Porsche listed
for the smaller engine. Despite stumbling out of the
blocks with it in 1970, by 1973, Porsche had fixed most of what
ailed the four-cylinder 914, primarily with the more powerful
2.0-liter engine. But the engineers also fitted a new gearbox.
Earlier 914s, with their notably balky shifting, used a linkage
that connected at the far rear of the transmission. The new-for-'73
transaxle featured a connection closer to the front of the unit,
allowing for a smoother-acting shifter via a shorter linkage
rod. Magazine reviewers of the day, who had been harsh in
some reviews when the car debuted in 1970, began praising the car
once the larger engine had been fitted. Its handling truly the
car's single most attractive attribute remained strong, due to a
fully independent suspension with torsion bars up front and coil
springs at the rear. Unassisted power steering allowed for
excellent feedback and control of the lightweight machine with near
50/50 weight distribution. Disc brakes at all four corners provided
plenty of stopping power. This 914 Limited Edition
Creamsicle is in excellent condition, very nicely restored at a
cost of $70,000.00 with approximately 500 miles of use since. The
paintwork is beautiful, to have it preserved, the previous owner a
good friend, client-collector of Autosport Designs, Inc. decided to
wrap this 914 rather than repaint to ensure the paint under the
wrap is preserved properly. The original interior is in excellent
condition. Available with detailed restoration receipts,
this very rare 914 LE Creamsicle is once again, one of only 500
total production with approximately 200 left per the registry.
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