The 914 CAN AM CAR PROTOTYPES
In late 1973, to commemorate their racing victories in the 1972 and 1973 Can Am racing series and to boost sales of the 914 model, Porsche began to develop the 1974 Porsche 914 Can Am Edition. This car was to be a special production car limited to only 1000 vehicles, and was refined through at least seven known prototypes before production commenced. The 914 Can Am prototypes are numbered on this webpage for easy reference so we can follow how the car developed.
914
Can Am Prototype Car 1 The initial
design study for the 914 Can Am car was unveiled at the IAA Frankfurt Auto Show
in September 1973. The special 914
displayed at this show was the first 914 Can Am Prototype Car painted black and
feature painted yellow bumpers, valences and wheels. This black and yellow paint color theme was a
primary and dominant concept that would prevail throughout the development and
production of the Porsche 914 Can Am series.
Most of the 914 Porsche Can Am car prototypes are in this color scheme,
but no photo of this specific car has been located yet, unfortunately. However, the September 1973 IAA Frankfurt
Auto Show was a great show for 914s. The
photo below shows that there were several specially-prepared 914s presented at
IAA Frankfurt Auto Show – September 1973
IAA Frankfurt Auto Show – September 1973 - 914s with special graphics on display
914 Can Am Prototype Cars 2 and 3 The next month, at the Paris Salon automobile show in October 1973, on the Karmann stand, two 914 cars in European trim with striking accent graphics were displayed. Both cars have the 4-bolt Fuchs wheels introduced the previous model year, with dark accent graphics over a lighter body color. The Targa bar on 914 Can Am Prototype Car 2 was painted body-color and without vinyl. 914 Can Am Prototype Car 3 was painted a metallic orange, has Targa bar vinyl and was also displayed at the IAA Frankfurt Auto Show, as seen in the photo above.
914 Can Am
Prototype Cars 2 and 3
914
Can Am Prototype Car 4 Ludwigsens’ Excellence
was Expected, indicates that a third 914 car, an American model, was
also on display at the Paris Salon automobile show in October 1973. This American model is described as having a
third style of side stripes with the word PORSCHE cut out of the stripe
revealing the text in body color, but no photos of this 914 car at this show
have been located. This car would be an
important car to have a photograph of, as it was the first known 914 to display
the negative style side stripes that would become a key design element of the
914 Limited Edition and 914 SL cars.
While no photo of 914 Can Am Prototype Car 4 has been located, there is
a photo of a prototype 1974 911 Turbo with the negative stripes at that same
The Negative
Side Stripe on a 1974 911 Turbo in Paris, October 1973
914 Can Am Prototype Car 5 With eager acceptance of the special edition 914 Can Am car concept by the international car show community, the next known prototype was documented in January 1974. In Brian Longs book Porsche 914 and 914/6 there is a photo of a car referenced as having the ‘G-pack option’, subtitled “the forerunner of the 914 GT and Limited Edition.” This car is a European market 1974 VW-Porsche 914, displays for the first time the specially-designed 914 Can Am front air dam, driving lights, painted contrasting color bumpers and valences and is without side stripes. The driving light grilles appear to be the chromed plastic finish, and not black. Notably, it has the optional four-bolt Fuchs forged alloy wheels with the wheel centers painted to match the accent color, and the wheel lug bolts are bright, not black, which are features later found only on the 914 SL cars for Japan. Targa bar vinyl covering was not installed and it does not have the lower Targa bar horizontal trim piece used to trim the vinyl. While it is a black and white photo and the actual color is not known, it is a light colored car, like the Light Ivory-based 914 Can Am cars would be.
914 Can Am
Prototype Car 5 (G-Pack)
After studying the plain-looking 914 G-Pack car and to more closely visually associate it with the actual Can Am race cars, Porsche wanted to create a unique side stripe for the 914 Can Am car. To this point in time Porsche had only offered side stripes in a positive lettering style, and in black and white only, for both the earlier Porsche 911 and 914 cars. For the new side stripe design, Porsche was inspired by nothing less than the wild and successful graphic scheme of the mighty 1973 911 Carrera 2.7 RS cars. The 1973 911 Carrera 2.7 RS cars were basic white-color cars with brightly colored accents, a theme that would continue with the 914 Can Am cars. The 911 Carrera 2.7 RS colors were Grand Prix White, with Viper Green, Phoenix Red and Mexico Blue accent colors. One of the 914 Can Am car versions would feature the standard 914 white color Light Ivory as similar to Grand Prix White, with Phoenix Red as the accent color.
911 Carrera RS with side stripe
This is a good place to mention that in addition to the exterior color schemes there are other interesting parallels between the 1973 Porsche 911 Carrera 2.7 RS cars and the 914 Can Am cars. Both cars were of very limited production quantities. Both cars featured the best factory performance features available at that time for their respective production models. Both cars featured uniquely designed side stripes and custom body panels. Both cars commemorated Porsche racing success in previous racing campaigns. One can easily imagine that the 914 Can Am cars might have appropriately been named the Porsche 914 Can Am 2.0 RS.
914 Can Am Prototype Car 6 Results of the side stripe design study appeared on the next 914 Can Am prototype car which displayed a side stripe design initially proposed by the Vertriebsgesellschaft mbH, the VW-Porsche marketing company. This design was an updated and similar look to the 911 Carrera 2.7 RS stripes. The title of the racing series “Canam” was presented in a flowing, cursive font reminiscent of the Carrera RS side stripes, and had narrow linear top and bottom stripes stretching horizontally from wheel well to wheel well. An interesting design, but the senior designers at Porsche denied use of this special Porsche graphical theme for application to a 914 because it was too similar to the one used on the 911 Carrera RS cars. A notable feature of this proposed scheme was that the typical 914 rear emblem badging was also revised in addition to the side striping, replacing the typical rear “914” and “2.0” tailbadges with a “PORSCHE” tailbadge, [on a European 914!], and a cursive “Canam” beneath it, in the same side stripe font. The revised tailbadging is visible in the photo below if you look carefully. Note that this prototype vehicle in European fitment (ROW rear taillight lenses and omitted rear bumper guards, sidemarker lights, engine lid script) has 914 4-bolt Fuchs alloy wheels, silver rear Targa bar molding and Targa bar vinyl covering. It is not discernible if the Fuchs are painted or not in this monochromatic photo. Hey check out that prototype LE front spoiler...glad it never made it into production!
"The option package "CanAm" will be offered from Model 74 on, in addition to the known option packages. Find the details on the overview page."
From a German VW Porsche publication, the 914 Can Am car was announced
914 Can Am Prototype Car 6 for Europe/ROW and USA/Canada
914 Can Am Prototype Car 6 Spoiler
914
Can Am Prototype Car 7 To generate
an acceptable 914 Can Am side stripe design, Porsche then hired their own
graphics designer to develop an alternative side stripe solution, which
displayed the word “CANAM”, integrating a maple leaf symbol signifying Canada,
and a symbolic trio of American stars.
Porsche approved this design scheme on 914 Can Am Prototype Car 7 and
intended to use this scheme on all 914 Can Am cars, for both the
914 Can Am Car Prototypes |
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914 Can Am Car |
Type |
Body/accent colors |
Side stripe |
Wheels |
Targa Bar |
Notes |
Prototype 1 |
Unknown |
First 914 Can Am prototype to display Black/Yellow color
scheme |
Unknown |
First 914 Can Am prototype to display painted Yellow
wheels |
Unknown |
|
Prototype 2 |
|
Light/Dark |
Stylized body graphics |
Fuchs |
Painted body color, silver trim |
|
Prototype 3 |
|
Metallic Orange/Black |
Stylized body graphics |
Fuchs |
Vinyl, silver trim |
|
Prototype 4 |
|
Unknown |
First 914 Can Am prototype to display PORSCHE negative
side stripes |
Unknown |
Unknown |
|
Prototype 5 |
|
Only light color body / dark color trim 914 Can Am prototype. First 914 to display the Can Am front
spoiler |
None |
First 914 Can Am prototype to display painted 4-bolt Fuch
wheels |
Painted body color, black trim |
G-Pack, January 1974 |
Prototype 6 |
|
Black/Yellow |
Cursive Canam side stripes |
Fuchs |
Vinyl, silver trim |
Cursive Canam stripe design with rear Porsche tailbadge
rejected by Porsche |
Prototype 7 |
|
Black/Yellow |
CANAM side stripe with maple leaf and stars |
First 914 Can Am prototype with Mahle wheels |
Vinyl, black trim |
CANAM side stripe approved by Porsche |
The
Can Am organization had the final say Ripple
effects from the 1973 oil crisis in America affected all things
automobile-related including competitive auto racing. The Can Am organization modified the rules of
their road racing series, imposing a fuel efficiency restriction for competing
cars to achieve not less than 3 miles per gallon of fuel. Porsche was the superpower of the Can Am
racing series to this point in time and were nearly unbeatable. This rule change for fuel efficiency, which
may have also been discreetly intended to encourage better competition, ended
Porsche’s domination of the Can Am racing series. Porsche did not want to participate under the
revised rules, so on January 28th 1974, Porsche resigned from the Can Am racing
series. Without the participation of
Porsche, the Can Am racing series quickly became uneventful and was
discontinued after an abbreviated 1974 season.
The
Can Am rule change and the subsequent withdrawal by Porsche, obviously and
profoundly affected the 914 Can Am car program.
Without the association to Can Am, Porsche was in a dilemma. By late January of 1974, development money
had been spent, prototypes had been built and approved, the car had been
publicly displayed and promoted, and the international automobile community was
merely awaiting delivery. But now the
special production cars could not be named after Can Am, so they were given new
names. The final naming designation for
the 914 Can Am cars for distribution in the
The
Post-Can Am resignation 914 Can Am car development: The 914 Can Am prototype car development
process had focused almost entirely on variations of the European 914 GT car,
which was then broadened at the last minute to include the USA 914 LE and 914
SL for Japan. The only documented
USA-format 914 Can Am prototype cars we know of were 914 Can Am prototype cars
4 and 7, developed before the departure from Can Am, which differs in
significant ways from the 914 LE cars ultimately produced. The contrast between the 914 LE and the 914
GT is even more profound if you consider the relative abundance of official
documentation about the 914 GT for which only very few were produced, and the
complete lack of factory information on the final form of the 914 LE, where
1000 cars were issued. I have located no
information at all on the 914 SL development process, other than the subtle use
of painted Fuchs on Prototype Cars 5 and possibly 6. Three decades later, the handful of surviving
914 Can Am cars must speak quietly for themselves of their authenticity and
detailing.
914 LE and 914 SL side stripes: As a result of the naming redesignation, the previously-approved CANAM side stripes (displayed on 914 Can Am Prototype Car 7) were never produced. The 914 LE and 914 SL cars received the simplified negative block lettered PORSCHE side stripes, in the correct 914 Can Am accent colors, which first appeared on 914 Can Am Prototype Car 4 and the 911 Turbo car at the October 1973 Paris Salon. The bold negative-lettered side stripe design became a distinguishing feature of the 914 LE and 914 SL cars.
914
GT side stripes: Because the
VW-Porsche 914 was promoted by and known as a Volkswagen in
Wheels and exterior trim: The 914 LE and 914 GT cars are fitted with Mahle (4-bolt) cast aluminum wheels, the 914 SL with 4-bolt Fuchs, and all wheel centers are painted in the accent color, leaving wheel lips unpainted. According to the respected German reference text, Das Grosse VW Porsche Buch, “the 914 GT cars were to receive the popular Fuchs forged alloy wheels (four-bolt)”. This reference must be in reference to the 914 SL cars, which received the painted Fuchs. The 914 LE would not receive vinyl covering on the Targa bar, where the 914 GT did receive the Targa vinyl, and the rear Targa bar metal trim was painted satin black.
Promotion,
advertising…and contradictions: It
is a mystery to me, given the initial factory aspirations for the 914 Can Am
cars, that only very minimal official documentation is available. There appears to have been essentially no
public promotion of the 914 Can Am cars, for a car Porsche built explicitly to
boost sales of the 914 model. A
marketing brochure including advertisements is said to have been available, but
it has not been located. I have
researched media advertising for Porsche and VW-Porsche 914 cars during 1973
and 1974, including well over 100 magazine advertisements, magazine articles
and dealership brochures about the 914 from the
SUMMARY
The
entire development and production process of this limited production car series
occurred from sometime during the summer of 1973 before the
What then is the fundamental distinction between a 914 Can Am car and a similarly-equipped standard 914 Porsche? One could easily say and be correct, that the 914 LE, 914 GT and 914 SL are merely fully-equipped standard 914 cars with a special paint job and front air dam, but that view only recognizes the mechanical and physical attributes of the car. More than anything else the 914 Can Am cars have SOUL unlike any other 914 car, stemming from their unique PROVENANCE. Porsche memorialized their victories in endurance road racing by factory-producing a limited production commemorative car with distinctive features. They gave it a special name, special features, recognition and status. This distinction is the essence of the car and in its factory-recognized heritage. While every Porsche has earned the birthright to the marques racing heritage, Porsche purposely recognized and commemorated their Can Am racing victories through the 914 Can Am cars, and that cannot be said of any ordinary 914.
The 914 Porsche LE, the VW-Porsche 914 GT and the VW-Porsche 914 SL are Great Cars!