Porsche has been a standard bearer in performance for sports cars for the better half of a century. Oftentimes, collectors want to own the iconic and legendary vehicles precisely as they were the day they left the factory. But, there’s another school of thought — the outlaw way.
Rod Emory, owner of Emory Motorsports and builder and proprietor of Outlaw Porsches, lives to modify cars — specifically, classic Porsches. Whether it’s the sacred 356, an air-cooled 911 or a more recent Stuttgart creation, Emory has a habit of getting his hands on them and giving them the performance they deserve. You won’t see him bolting on massive wide-body kits or adding ridiculous camber to the wheels, though. No, Emory focuses on the essentials: power and clean design.
Though Emory has disassembled hundreds of old Porsches, rebuilds them and enhances them (he completed his first build at 16 years-old), the rest of us mere mortals aren’t as adept in the art of the wrench. So what about the top-level changes — the most simple of modifications — anyone can do? Emory weighed in with his suggested modifications for our favorite vintages.
356

If I was a buyer of a brand new 1965 356 C Coupe and I wanted to make the car more my own, I would lower the car 1-1.5 inches, put bigger, wider 5.5-inch rims on and add a more modern performance tire — maybe a 195/60 Pirelli tire. That’ll give the car a little bit lower stance better stance and with lighter aluminum rims, all that will make the car driver better.
I’d also get rid of the bumper guards — the goofy guard on the front of the bumper — clean up the bumpers, front and rear and put fog lights on. And on the deck lid to give the engine more airflow, I’d put a series of louvers like the way Porsche did its GT cars. Then I’d remove the Coupe seats and replace them with the Speedster seats, which are more of a bucket seat instead of the big, hefty reclining seat. All of that will make the car lower to the ground, handle better and help the car be an all-around better handling car.