I cannot find the capacity of your Porsche. I would recommend you park the vehicle on a level surface and drain the oil and change the filter. Add 7 quarts of oil and start the engine letting it run for 1 minute if you have good oil pressure. Shut off and wait 30 minutes and check the oil level. Add as necessary to reach the full mark. You will then know the capacity.
Fast. Depends on year and model (Turbo, Turbo S, etc.)
OK, I'm haven't used these number for a a little while however the Porsche 944 Turbo was produced with two different HP numbers as follows: Porsche 944 Turbo (85-88)-217 881/2 - 91 -253 During the 1988 model year Porsche produced two 944 Turbo versions, the 'normal version' and a model they called the 'Turbo S'. The Turbo S became the standard model from 1989. 0-100km/h time somewhere between 5-6 seconds.
The 997 wasn't available in 2000. That model came out in 2005. The Porsche 911 model in 2000 was the 996. The turbo would have been $114,000 to $130,000, depending on options.
Porsche Panemera-160mph S. Model-175mph 4 Model-159mph 4S Model-175mph Hybrid Model-167mph GTS Model-178mph Turbo Model-188mph Turbo S. Model-190mph Interested in Porsches? Go to http://www.porsche.com/usa/
The Porsche 911 Turbo model was first introduced in 1974. The model stopped seeing production in 1989, but later 911 models always had a turbo charged version for sale.
Porsche uses different internal numbers for the turbo models, the following are what they have; 924 Turbo = 931 944 Turbo = 951 911 Turbo = 930 The 930 line stopped in 1989, Porsche got away from the different internal numeration for turbo and non-turbo models. "911" is the generic term for Porsche's iconic rear-engine sports car. The internal numerical designation for the present model is 997, and Porsche now applies that designation to both Turbo and non-Turbo models. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The 930 is the generation of which 911 you have.
how many 2007 porsche turbo were made
The lux model had it as standard, the turbo didnt have it as it reduced chassis stiffness too much. So Porsche say.
Yes, you can turbo anything.
Porsche produced 612 993 turbo's for the 1997 model year. I believe 11 of them were finished in speed yellow.
The 2007 911 Porsche 911 Turbo flat-6 engine has 24 valves.
It depends on which model you order. A 911 Turbo takes about 6 months.