Land Rover’s Defender has Kahn Design, Jaguar’s E-Type has Eagle and Porsche’s Porsche 911 has Singer.
The US-based tuning house is synonymous with Porsche’s iconic sports car across the globe and even showcased its latest works at the recent Goodwood Festival of Speed at the personal invitation of Lord March.
Though Singer works exclusively with the 964 911s, the company has recently branched out to start restoring Targa variants as well as traditional coupés. We arrive at a photographic studio in east London to see both cars in more detail, and Singer boss Rob Dickinson explains the idea behind the brand.
“I thought, 'Why not try and celebrate this incredible air-cooled era of the 911 with some kind of halo machine that embodied everything that was great about the car? Something that was a kind of greatest hits car,'” says Dickinson, a former Lotus engineer.
The first Singer model was restored by Dickinson himself, as he melded together a 1969 Porsche 911 chassis with a 1979 engine to create his own daily driver. “I was constantly being asked to sell it,” he says, “and I started to tell people that while they couldn’t buy it I could maybe build them something similar. That car was the genesis of Singer.”
Singer’s customers source their own 964s – described by Dickinson as “the sweet spot” of Porsche’s air-cooled 911 era - and then hand them over to the company for an extensive reimagining.
It’s important to note, as Singer does, that the company doesn’t manufacture its own cars, with its work instead being very much in the spirit of a tribute to Porsche – something which Dickinson says has enabled Singer to “tread gently” with the brand.
Though the original 964 came with a 3.6-litre flat six engine with 222bhp, Singer offers its customers either a Cosworth-tuned 3.8-litre flat six with 345bhp or a more powerful 4.0-litre flat six with a ‘conservative’ 385bhp.
To put those power outputs in context, a 4.0-litre Singer customer car recently lapped the Laguna Seca circuit just two seconds slower than McLaren’s P1, becoming the ninth fastest road car to ever drive the circuit.
Engines are linked to either a five or six-speed manual transmission, although Singer is already working on an automatic gearbox for a customer.
Sitting inside the cockpit of the coupé, you can easily see the attention to detail that Singer has lavished on the Porsche 911. It’s a classic interior but one which has been modernised to include luxuries such as air conditioning and satellite navigation. It’s all hidden, though, with the sat-nav screen only emerging when needed and the retro air-con button blending with the car’s original dashboard. Perhaps Singer’s most famous design trait, the rev-counter that goes all the way up to 11, is also present.
Join the debate
Add your comment
Kahn NOOOO!
Overfinch or possibly Twisted for Land Rover - at least they had/have decent engineering of the base product and not just bejewelling something.
As to the article good pictures but needs more detail :-)
With a big Euromillions win I'd be visiting Singer as I can geek out on the engineering.
Really Nice!
might replace the Bristol