I amsure someone of you like's this ;-) Steve McQueen's owner's manual for his 1970 Porsche 911 S driven on and off screen in Le Mans. Steve McQueens owners manual for his 1970 Porsche 911 S driven on and off screen in Le Mans. Personal 7 x 9 in. owners manual for Steve McQueens 1970 Porsche 911 S - 200 DIN horsepower @ 6,500 rpm, 7,300 rpm redline, 2,195 cc / 133.9 cubic inch horizontally opposed six-cylinder engine, five-speed manual transmission, independent front and rear suspension. Wheelbase: 102.4 in. In the opening scenes of Le Mans, Steve McQueen shares the spotlight with his gray Porsche as he cruises the French country side in what would be one of the few serene diving scenes in the high powered racing film. The Porsche was delivered to the star on the set of Le Mans. The car was registered to McQueen and invoiced to the movies property master for use during filming and for McQueens personal use. The Owners Manual comes complete with its original factory plastic folder. Including Worldwide and US directories of Porsche service centers, a 108-page Owners Manual, German ledger for recording engine performance, Speedometer transparency to change dial from MPH to KM/H, Maintenance Record folder with McQueens name and address, including maintenance stickers. Accompanied by German invoices and purchase paperwork for the King of Cools car of choice. All in very good condition. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
That car sold at auction a few years back. I'm sure the new owner would dearly love to have the books that accompany the car. Sports car Market database should have the auction report. The auction house would have the buyer's information and could put you in touch.
Hello, thank you. The papers go to the Ladenburg auction in May. Automobilia Auktion Ladenburg Think it's the best place for Special items like this.
I know the new owner sent the car to Porsche to be restored! Hopefully this documentation will be reunited with the car
No altruism here, the owner is clearly promoting the set in the hope of realizing a spectacular result in the auction. There are two groups of potential bidders: the owner of the car, who may or may not value it highly; and McQueen fanatics who would pay $$$ for his dirty socks. Any predictions on price? Euro 10,000?
Three groups of potential bidders: parasitic speculators looking to make a fast buck by extorting the car's owner.
I have a Maserati Bora. Someone on Ebay had the original manual for my car (no provenance to my car at all). I offered to swap him for a manual in better shape. He declined, cancelled the listing and re-ebayed it for 3X the price. Needless to say I never got to reunite the manual with the car. I have a particular distain for this stuff.
@09Scuderia, what do you mean? The car was sold via RM without papers, see: 1970 Porsche 911S Steve McQueen Le Mans Movie Car | Monterey 2011 | RM AUCTIONS Bill of sale, but no papers.
Why would you say that? Buying low and selling high is what is commonly known as capitalism. What would you want the manual owner to do, give it away?
I can't imagine why ANYONE would have ANY interest in these items knowing the the car exists with someone who does not have these items, but ought to have them. But that's just me.
The interest someone would and should have...profit! The law of supply and demand sets the price. If the car owner does not want to pay the price, he is not compelled to buy. What exactly is wrong with that? If reunification is so important, why doesn't the car owner give away the car to reunite it with the manual owner?
Understood. However, there are exceptions to every rule. I have in fact uncovered docs to very historical cars and re-united them with the car's owner, for nothing! I thought it was the right thing to do. Years later, that gentleman, a prominent collector, became one of my best clients. Sometimes you have to look beyond immediate profit. That's my position, and for those that think differently, make yourself happy.
^^^^This. Plus - this: We still have not satisfactorily answered how these documents got separated from the car, and how they are just now coming to market.
...but this topic is intriguing since it was also discussed on Pelican a few months ago, with the last post by fg1227, who was the previous owner of the car. After fg1227's post, there was no follow up on the docs authenticity or why they got separated from the car. Link: Steve McQueen service record page - Page 2 - Pelican Parts Technical BBS Once my '79 930 comes in I'll make a more worthy second post. JB
Hello to all, here is the big discussion about the papers: Steve McQueen's owner's manual for his 1970 Porsche 911 S Interesting to follow the discussion.
Two questions: 1. Are you the Seller of these items? 2. Why are these items surfacing now as opposed to when the car was auctioned?
Hello Joe. to 1: yes, I am the owner/seller. to 2: I dont know how separated the papers from the car. For sure it was before the auction. The papers are in incredible condition, so they where stored for a long, long time... The car is in Germany, sold via RM for about 1.3 Mio. $ and then restored totaly for another 200-300 € (!) rumors...