Journal: Would You Paint Your 911 Mint Green?

Would You Paint Your 911 Mint Green?

By Petrolicious Productions
March 5, 2013
17 comments

Photography by Josh Clason

Jim Bauer grew up in Long Island, New York, under the GM Flag.  A chance encounter led him from American muscle to German iron and he currently owns two Porsche 911 SC’s.  Jim, now a creative director in Los Angeles, has used his artistic nature to build the unique details and color of his latest 911.

Q. Tell us a little about yourself.

A. I work as an art director/graphic designer for Odyssey BMX/Sunday Bikes/Fairdale Bikes. I’m married to a wonderful lady who lets me have fun with cars, and I have an amazing daughter who has only thrown up once in my car.

Q. How did you find this 911?


A. I found it through Pelican Parts, the go-to forum for all things Porsche. The best thing about it is the people on there are so knowledgeable and ready to help. While car enthusiast sites are not exactly classy, Pelicans in general have a lot of class. The classifieds section is full of great Porsche stuff, but it also is scoured by fellow enthusiasts. I can’t believe someone else didn’t scoop up the Sun-dried Tomato before I did (before I bought it, this car was a Guards Red 911 living outdoors in San Diego for years, hence the previous nickname). I had replaced my totally reasonable E36 M3 daily with a full-on race 1971 Datsun 240Z.

I loved it and had always wanted a Z since I grew up in one, but taking the steering wheel off and on everytime I got out or in was getting old for a daily driver. I replaced the E36 because it was too new, and while I love driving my 1981 911 SC, it was also a little too sports-purposed to drive it everyday. Since the Z was not an improvement in that department, I figured a bone-stock SC would be the perfect daily—even one my wife could drive.

Q. How did you become interested in 911s?

A. Like any young boy, I always loved cars. I always liked 911s, but I didn’t see them often in Long Island, and I always thought they were out of my league. Also, I grew up under the GM flag. I was saving up for a 77-78 Trans Am when a chance meeting with a 911 happened. I was in Arizona, visiting a friend who has a 911 SC. His dad (a Porsche mechanic) had left the car to him, and at the time of my visit it was running great, so we took it out that night. On the way home, my friend had to drive his friend’s car home, so I got to pilot the 911.

I was a changed man. That day, my Trans Am fund turned into a 911 fund. I started on eBay and very quickly was hunting for the right 911. I was very green on the Porsche front and didn’t find out a lot of information until after I found the right 911. Thankfully, even with all the mistakes I made, I found the right car, and to this date it is the the most reliable car I have ever owned. I still own it. I call it The Bulldozer—a 1981 911 SC.

Q. What is it like to drive this mint-green 911?

A. This 911 drives like a lightened-stock SC, which if you have driven one, is very easy (with practice). It’s nimble, fun, and powerful enough to blast through anything a daily driver needs, even with the other modern cars on the road.

At first I was a little scared while driving in the canyons, since my other 911 is lower, has more traction, more aero, and just seems more planted. This car is a bit lighter in some places and I really feel that weight savings. All the car needed was some suspension tweaking and simply getting used to the new set up. I am fully confident now—I just needed to learn some new dance moves.

Q. Why mint green? 

A. I have always been one to stand out in a crowd and not do what everyone else did. Years ago this mint-green idea would have been orange, but a flood of orange cars have been built since then.

I was on the fence between a Slate Grey/Nimbus Grey hybrid and the Seafoam/Mint Green. But when I went to a Porsche show with four Slate Grey cars, that pretty much sealed the deal. I loved the Mintgrun 964 RS, but we never got the RS in The States. The 968 shared that color, but I think the 968 registry says only six were ever made. That combo of a “real” Porsche color and exclusivity was what I wanted. Real is in quotation marks, because I’ve never seen the Mintgrun in real life, so the color is still a custom mix to my eye and not the paint code from Porsche. It’s a love-it-or-hate-it color, but I would rather have that than a middle-of-the-road color. Luckily, I love it. When I asked my painter, Martine of Areta Auto Body, whether he liked it after he shot it, he said he hated it, straight up.

Q. What do most people that you meet think about the car? 

A. In person, I have only heard good comments from everyone. There has been an internet hater or two, but those are great odds coming from the internet! While my idea for the color was forming, my friends were doubtful of the outcome, but I think in real life and not on paper (or in my head) it all makes sense together.

Q. Describe your favorite drive in this car: 

A. When I first finished it, instead of the passenger seat you see here, I had a Recaro child seat mounted in its place. I started to build this car when my wife was pregnant, and my daughter was born during the build. The first time I got to take my baby daughter out in the car was my favorite drive.

Aside from that, anytime I take it to the canyons with my friends is great. It is a daily driver, so I am just happy that it makes a normal LA commute into something special. It makes the other cars around me everyday seem so boring. You would think anything gets old, but I still do the glance-back every day when I park the car and walk away. I still take a second to soak it in and be glad I am able to be so lucky.

Q. What do you love about the car?

A. The fact that an “exotic” sports car from the ’80s can be driven everyday so easily. It has panache and style and purpose when so much of car design is boring and soulless. Its a blend of minimalist sports purpose. It has everything I need and nothing I don’t need. I would drive it across country right now, if I had the time. I could go pick up groceries or go to the racetrack and have fun doing both while looking good doing it. How many cars are like that?

Q. With this car, is it a fling, or are you in it for the long haul?

A. Long haul. I still have more plans for it.

 

Join the Conversation
Related
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
17 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
frauki athans
frauki athans
4 years ago

Its so important for me because io always https://rememberpasswordsinmicrosoftedge.net lost my password and then i create some problem so that now i get this site and i like to work here.

Jon Ulrich
Jon Ulrich
8 years ago

The color goes so well with the shape of the Porsche that it should have been a factory color. Sometimes a non-factory color just looks ‘wrong’ (I imagine the designers at Porsche tried every color in the color wheel to come up with the factory colors) but this color looks just right. Kudos.

mrnicelife
mrnicelife
11 years ago

I’ve seen you on Culver/Washington blvd a few times & been taken aback by how badass this thing is. Well played sir, well played indeed.

Peter Middleton
Peter Middleton
11 years ago

So where does the BMX go? 😛 … Never realized you could get so big time working in BMX! Good job man

Ken Kreafle
Ken Kreafle
11 years ago

Did I miss it? Is this car actually an SC or an earlier model?

Dave Bouzaglou
Dave Bouzaglou
11 years ago

the seats : LOL ! we supplied Jim with a special pair of prototype ST/RSR seats that had been destined for a SEMA Show car. That client wanted more bling, so Jim got a screaming deal on our “GT 40” inspired nickel plated grommet center section buckets. I am sure he was tired of getting branded with the hot grommets in summertime. Explaining why your back looks like an Octopus glommed onto you must have been getting old 😉 . So the TJ blankies are much cooler and offer some sweat resistance to the vinyl coverings. We applaud his innovation and design overall , and the multi rainbow covers work well too !

Ferrari gto
Ferrari gto
11 years ago

I like the side view mirror. Sort of a homage to the 550 spyder. Was that an aftermarket part or was that custom creation?

Adam Fairfax
Adam Fairfax
11 years ago

Well from somebody that owns a chocolate brown 74 2.7 Carrera (factory code ‘bitter chocolate’), i’ve got to say I like the colour. Love the colour of the wheels too. Well done. Oh By the way, I ALSO have a 71 240Z that is painted McLaren Papaya Orange! What is it about 911 and 240Z’s that seem to attract the same crowd all the time?!

Nathan Zientek
Nathan Zientek
11 years ago

A mint green 964 has been my dream car for a long time, so thumbs up on the color choice. Cool seats, not sure about the mismatched wheels though, to each his own.

Isaac DC
Isaac DC
11 years ago

Beautiful car! And what a graet stance! I love the wheels and the colour, but if i had to choose i would ‘ve chosen the Porsche paintcode. But this is a graet car! The matte black accents are graet to but the ‘racy’ side view mirror striks me the most!

Sid Widmer
Sid Widmer
11 years ago

Nice, I considered bronze wheels but went with satin black for my Gaurds red ’87 Carrera. I would also like to know about the seats.

Paul Thompson
Paul Thompson
11 years ago

I’m definitely for the [url=”http://thechicaneblog.com/2011/02/14/fuchs-up-front-minilites-in-the-back/”]Fuchs Up Front, Minilites in the Back[/url] thing. Mean outlaw touch harking back to the old Group 4 911S race cars.

Kyle Howe
Kyle Howe
11 years ago

That color is amazing.

Soren
Soren
11 years ago

The color actually suits me just fine. The thing that’s really bugging me though is the wheels. They’re not matching. Also I can’t imagine this color looking too good on a snowy day. Or in the country. Or on a track.

Alex Clise
Alex Clise
11 years ago

Gorgeous. I love the mint w/ bronze, although I’d like to see matching wheels; Fuchs are becoming a bit cliche, but still look great, I’m a big fan of the 8-spoke streets though.

Terrence Dorsey
Terrence Dorsey
11 years ago

Those seats! Tell me more about those seats.

Matthew Lange
11 years ago

There seem to be so many back dated or hot rod 911s around (the Magnus Walker cars and the [url=”http://www.drivecult.com/news/up-close-with-the-singer-911-in-london”]Singer 911 [/url]for example) that the idea would be getting a bit passe, but everytime I see one I think they look bloody cool. Love the Bronze wheels on this one.

Petrolicious Newsletter