Bruce Anderson
The 911 & Porsche World
I am a third generation Californian, I was born and raised in the Santa Clara
Valley in California, which you may recognize as our renowned Silicon Valley
where we have had our high tech revolution. My first career was in the
electronics industry where I was a technical writer.
I was a regular at the sports car races in the early '50s when there were
local tracks at the Fair Grounds, Moffett Field Navel Air Station, Golden
Gate Park in San Francisco and of course the famed Pebble Beach. My interest
on sports cars became focused on Porsches after a ride down Dry Creek Road,
which was the only winding road within several miles of my home in 1955 in a
friends 1953 Porsche normal coupe. For any of you who have had the
opportunity to recently drive a pre-A 356 you may wonder why I was impressed,
but that was a long time ago and that was the way it was. Up until then the
only sports cars that I had ridden in were MGs and Austin Healys.
From that first ride in 1955 I have had a love affair with Porsches every
since and had an abiding interest in the advancements in Porsche technology.
I can remember going to a car show in a local shopping center in 1956 and
marveling at a new 356A model with its 15 inch wheels, improved suspension,
and curved windshield, this was a truly advanced wonder for its time quite a
technical improvement.
I purchased my first Porsche in 1961, a shiny new ruby red Super Karmann
Hardtop, from our local dealer Norm Anderson VW-Porsche in San Jose. Since
then I have owned eleven more Porsches and currently own a 356 Speedster and
a 944. Among the colossal errors of my life are some of the cars that I have
sold including a 1959 GT Speedster and a 1964 SC GT Coupe.
I joined the Porsche Club of America (PCA) in 1964 and have been active in
the club for many year on both a local and National level. I have attended
twenty of the annual Porsche Parades.which are a national gatherings of the
faithful for fun and competition. I received the top score on the Technical
Quiz that is sponsored by Bosch at three of the parades and won my class
championship in autocross at the 1973 Porsche Parade in my 914-6. I retired
from autocrossing in 1976, after 12 years of competition and several class
championships in both PCA and Northern California Sports Car Council events.
I like the technical aspects of Porsches and have served the club as the
national Technical Chairman for PCA since 1981.
Seriously competing in concours is a generally accepted way of proving
oneself to be slightly bonkers, in case there's room for doubt. I set out to
dispel any doubts by showing my 1964 SC GT from 1969 through 1971 winning a
lot of shows. My favorite victories were Best of show at a Porsche Club West
Coast Weekend Meet and wins at the Pebble Beach Concours and Hillsborough
Concours. Since 1971 I have confined my interest in concours to just judging
at local shows and the national Porsche Parades.
In the 1960s a friend and I started a Porsche performance business at his
home in his garage. We started by modifying and tweeking our own cars and our
friends cars for autocrossing and club competition. This business grew into a
full time business in the early 1970s as Garretson Enterprises. We had a great deal of fun with our Porsche business preparing cars for others and racing around the world. I was part owner and General manager of for about
ten year before we sold the business and all went our separate ways.
Our first racing program was for our friends the local Porsche Dealers and
the distributor, Porsche Cars Pacific. We ran a 914 for them in the 1972 and
1973 seasons. Next we prepared cars for off road racing and Pikes Peak, where
we won in 1976 with Rick Mears driving and Gary Lee Kanawyer in 1981. Over
the years we established a winning record with the cars we prepared winning
the IMSA GTU, GTX and GTO championship and the Porsche Cup, the FIA World
Endurance Drivers Championship and the Porsche Team Cup. The past couple of
years we have helped some friends in Show Room Stock racing with their 944s,
winning the 1986 Pro-SSGT Escort series.
I first became acquainted with 911s during the winter of 1966/67 when some
friends and I bought a half a dozen engines that were badly damaged, but not
lost, in a shipwreck in the Azores. These engines had started out in cars,
but when the ship that they were being transported in was rammed by another
ship the 911s broke loose in the flooded hold. Please note that I said
engines, my first 911 experience was just with the engines. I didn't actually
work on one of the cars until about a year later when we installed one of our
refurbished engines into a 912 making it into a 911. By the time we had
resurrected all of our engines we had all learned quite a bit about the 911
engines and cars. My Porsche education continued with my rebuilding and hot
rodding 911 engines, and working on the race team. My education continues
today as I help others learn about these great cars with my technical
articles and books; by offering instruction in training courses on the
Porsches and by giving technical presentations lectures on the 911 engines.
Because of my love affair with Porsche and because I am racing enthusiast I
am really disappointed that Porsche has strayed from their focus on the
sports car racing. I feel that it was because they focused on this one form
of racing that they did so well. It took Porsche more than three decades to
build the reputation that they are allowing to be eroded away by their lack
of focus over the past five years. First they strayed away into CART Indy car
racing in the United States and more recently they have gone back into Formula 1
racing with Footwork. Both of these efforts were misguided and
failures and have certainly done more to tarnish the Porsche image than build
it. I am sure that if the same effort had been expended on a more modern
sports car that Porsche and their racing customers would still be world
contenders in sports car racing rather than the grid fodder that they have
become.