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[QUOTE=The_Canuck;687014]Bah that arguement sucks. It's a last name. There is only one way to say it.[/QUOTE]
Waah. I've had my first name spelled at least 5 different ways by friends/teachers/businesses, and my last name is mispronounced all the time. If I hear my friend say Porsh, I'm not gonna attack him and call him a noob or anything.
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[QUOTE=Rockefella;687082]Waah. I've had my first name spelled at least 5 different ways by friends/teachers/businesses, and my last name is mispronounced all the time. If I hear my friend say Porsh, I'm not gonna attack him and call him a noob or anything.[/QUOTE]
I am sure you remember Archie from "A fish called Wanda" who named his daughter Portia:)
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[QUOTE=henk4;687083]I am sure you remember Archie from "A fish called Wanda" who named his daughter Portia:)[/QUOTE]
Vaguely.
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[quote=bstrat;686939]LOL. What do you mean an African or a European Swallow?[/quote]
quoting Monty Python at your age gets some respect due :)
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[QUOTE=Matra et Alpine;687098]quoting Monty Python at your age gets some respect due :)[/QUOTE]
My thoughts exactly. Let's bring out the coconuts!
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[QUOTE=bstrat;687040]The year was 1951 and the car was a 356 Light Alloy Coupe. Its distinctive features are the panels beside the wheels.[/QUOTE]
And the drivers were Auguste Veuillet and Edmond Mouche. They finished in 20th place overall, winning the 1100cc class.
What was the name of the first Porsche's project and why?
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The 356, it was the 356th product, something like that.
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[QUOTE=bstrat;687045]Yes, I am answering them all off the top of my head. The ones I'm not answering I don't know.Thanks
[quote=nota]Who funded the tooling costs that enabled Ferry to build Porsches in r/h/d? [/quote][/QUOTE]
Here's the answer, its a neat bit of trivia :)
[QUOTE]The story began in 1951, when Norman Hamilton, a Melbourne pump manufacturer, was driving a big, American Oldsmobile Rocket 88 in Austria when he saw a tiny, slippery-looking sports car zip by.
Something of an enthusiast and no mean driver, Hamilton gritted his teeth and set off in pursuit along the Grossglockner Pass, tracking the elusive open-topped car to its source.
His appetite whetted, he subsequently met Dr Ferdinand Porsche, whose company had gone into production of the little Volkswagen-based sports car three years earlier.
As a result of that meeting, a gut feeling and a handshake, Hamilton became Australia's first Porsche agent and talked Dr Porsche into producing the sports car in right-hand-drive.
As part of their arrangement, Hamilton convinced Porsche to build its first two right-hand-drive models, after agreeing to fund the necessary tooling.
The legacy is favoured status for Porsche Australia in the Porsche world, but this was all ahead of Hamilton when, a couple of months after the Grossglockner Pass incident, he and his friend Andrew Kennedy collected a pair of right-hand-drive 356s, a Fish Silver cabriolet and a Maroon coupe, from the factory and drove them across the Alps to Genoa, where they were shipped to Australia.
The pair of Porsches was displayed at the South Melbourne Town Hall on November 1, 1951, and there is an irony in the fact that the Porsche went on sale in Australia three years before the VW Beetle with which it shared its major mechanical components, the Porsche having a 1286cc, air-cooled, horizontally-opposed engine mounted in the back, developing a modest 33kW of power.
[/QUOTE]
Into the 1980s, Hamilton was often referred to as the first Porsche concessionaire, but that distinction seems to have been dropped in recent times so it may have been proven inaccurate. However we were the first r/h/d market
[url]http://www.bowdensown.com.au/cars/911tr.html[/url]
^^This particular 911 is one-of-a-kind specification; a non-lightweight lightweight! :D
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[QUOTE=fisetdavid26;686862]That would be a shame for a self-called Porsche fan. PORSH-uh is the right way to pronounce it.[/QUOTE]
I am a porsche-phile and I pronounce it porsh. am I ashamed?
I tend to find that it is only americans who actually care how it is pronounced....
present company excepted of course
[QUOTE=The_Canuck;687014]Bah that arguement sucks. It's a last name. There is only one way to say it.[/QUOTE]
what are you on about?? lets see, name of famous french footballer, Henry. Don't think that is pronounced the same everywhere
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I've got a question: Why don't I have a Porsche, and what can you do to remedy this situation?
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[QUOTE=derekthetree;687215]what are you on about?? lets see, name of famous french footballer, Henry. Don't think that is pronounced the same everywhere[/QUOTE]
Here in Oz, Subaru is pronounced soober-eew. While not far away in NZ it seeems they emphasise the 'B' as in su-Bahru
I remember old codgers used to mutilate Renault (Reno) as Renolt, and Falcon was Fulcun (Ful-kn) as in "the faahkin fulkn wont start" :cool:
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[QUOTE=clutch-monkey;687061]how super duper awesome are GT3's?
i want to know this one, as well.[/QUOTE]
1. Very.
2. I forgot, but I read it somewhere before. Isn't it Christophorus?
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[QUOTE=nota;687225]Here in Oz, Subaru is pronounced soober-eew. While not far away in NZ it seeems they emphasise the 'B' as in su-Bahru
[/QUOTE]
I think that is mainly due to accent, correct?
Saying Porsche as Porsh is not due to someones accent. It's just not right.
:D
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What was the retail price for 911 Targa 3.3 SuperSport's?
We say Soo-bah-roo. German's pronounce Audi Oodee, VolksWagen = FolksVaagen, and the Yanks say Maaazzda lol
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[QUOTE=Waugh-terfall;687344]What was the retail price for 911 Targa 3.3 SuperSport's?
We say Soo-bah-roo. German's pronounce Audi Oodee, VolksWagen = FolksVaagen, and the Yanks say Maaazzda lol[/QUOTE]
Oww Dee, is the correct pronounciation for Audi. Not Oddee, could be wrong though.
I do remember reading somewhere that Audi PR was telling american journalists that Audi ryhmes with Howdy :D