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STORED FOR 42 YEARS: 1958 356A SUPER SPEEDSTER GARAGE FIND


tomo

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Barn find cars always break my heart a little, and I say this as someone who had one. My 356 lived in a barn for almost as long as this one. Unlike this car's long-term owner, who believed the patina would deter thieves, my car simply suffered at the hands Northeastern weather and salt. Like the car below, which was originally owned by LA disc jockey B. Mitchell Reed, my car's lengthy storage kept it very, very original. This 1958 356A Super Speedster will be auctioned by Gooding & Company at Scottsdale in January .This final year Speedster is unmodified, and benefits from the improved rear suspension used on very late 356A's. The car's second owner left the paint shaggy to deter thieves, which appears to have worked. The car stayed with them from 1970 until the present day. It will be auctioned at Scottsdale in January of next year..Gooding and Company make no mention of numbers matching status, though engine 81478 is in the correct range for the chassis number (84274). The seller drained the oil and removed the battery, and the car simply sat from 1974 to the present day.Though certainly heavily worn and dented, this 356 does not appear to have rusted badly. As such it should make a good restoration candidate, with plenty of original parts to work with. Of course, the new owner will have to source many small items, like bumpers and trim, but good bones are key to a good 356 restoration. Stay tuned for our complete Scottsdale auction preview in the coming weeks.

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  • 4 weeks later...

explaining that it was truly more a "garage find" than a barn find. However, that didn't stop those interested from bidding up the price will beyond the estimates. I guess you can't put a price on originality. Or, maybe you can. In this instance that price was $341,000.Lot-62-porsche-356-barn-find-800x534.jpg

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And I have read elsewhere that it wasn't a real garage find.   It had been prepared to be found like this.

That makes a lot of sense ...... the kind of "patina" this one has suffered from seems to be weather related.

I can't see the seats disintegrating like that if stored indoors .... doesn't feel quite right for a parked up car.

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And I have read elsewhere that it wasn't a real garage find.   It had been prepared to be found like this.

so "barn find" is more valuable than "garage find" which is more valuable than "neglected out in the yard and left to rot to bits".......?  ?

What an odd world we live in. I'd love to be a fly on the wall when it gets delivered and the missus casually takes a look at the invoice tucked under the wiper, US$314,000 YOU F&"!?ING IDIOT.

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I suspect to is a combination of rodents, weather from a leaking roof, and mostly lots of time and humidity.  People love originality in all its horrors.  One up here last year sold for $425K and then was sent to the US for a full restoration.

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