RE: Porsche Flat-Six 1:4 Model: Review

RE: Porsche Flat-Six 1:4 Model: Review

Wednesday 15th November 2017

Porsche Flat-Six 1:4 Model: Review

The perfect Christmas present for your petrol-headed nearest and dearest



If you're in the market for an air-cooled six-cylinder boxer engine these days, you'll likely be looking at spending rather a lot of money. But what if I were to tell you that you could have one for much, much less than that? Sort of.

Keep those part in order...
Keep those part in order...
Introducing the Porsche 6-Zylinder-Boxermotor, a 1:4 scale model of the highly sought after power unit. We sat down for five hours on Saturday afternoon - with a break to watch Wales lose to Australia, again - to find out what it's like.

With 290 pieces, it's certainly not lacking for detail, and with everything from paper head gaskets to tiny valve springs included, you won't want to miss anything out. Luckily there's a fantastic manual, created by the Porsche Museum in Stuttgart, featuring clear instructions interspersed with plenty of interesting history and information, as well as a few fun ads from the period.

Do keep an eye out though, as some of the German instructions seem to be more detailed than their translations, including at least one instance of part numbers present in the German but missing from English below.

You start by constructing the pistons, attaching them to the crankshaft and inserting them into the cylinders. There's no glue here, or at least there shouldn't be. The parts are of a very high quality and everything either snaps into place or is held together with tiny screws - which often need to find their way to the bottom of some quite deep holes; luckily a handily slim magnetic screwdriver is included. In the case of the two halves of each piston head, however, I found it useful to include a dab of modelling adhesive to get them to stay together properly.

... rather like this, in fact
... rather like this, in fact
From there on things fall into place pretty logically and straightforwardly, completing the model being a matter of time and patience rather than skill. There are a couple of fiddlier steps, such as getting the valve guide plates into the cylinder heads. The failure of any of the tiny plastic tabs to click entirely into place resulting in the valve stems being misaligned and the heads not sitting correctly when closed. Nightmare.

You can also save yourself many painstaking minutes of sprue-mark based deduction by resisting the urge to over-enthusiastically remove the cams from their moulded sheet without first noting their order...

Once complete, the entire assembly sits on a base powered by three AA batteries - not included, of course. This allows it to function, with the movement of the crank, pistons and valves all visible through the clear plastic exterior, the belt driven fan spinning on top, and LEDs simulating the spark plugs firing within.

Finished!
Finished!
It also plays the sound of the engine idling and revving, which is a nice thought, although one that would be improved in practice if the engine actually sped up when the revs did, and if you had the option of silencing it occasionally...

All in all though what you're left with is an excellently faithful recreation and a very high quality model. A fun way to either gain or impart a greater understanding of how an engine works, or just to pay tribute to one of the most iconic engines in motoring. Certainly a gift that many a PHer would be happy to wake up to under the tree!

 

 

 

 

 

Author
Discussion

SFO

Original Poster:

5,170 posts

190 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
how much?

Chemical Ali

932 posts

224 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
How much and where to buy?

shirt

23,436 posts

208 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
I was gifted one of these last xmas. It’s very well done, fun to build and has no glued parts so can be stripped and rebuilt over and over. It sits atop my bookshelf and is one of few car things the Mrs doesn’t mind.

Andrewph75

52 posts

158 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
£129 via the link in the article

morgrp

4,128 posts

205 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Hmm thats too much for me - 50-70 quid I'd be tempted to buy one but £130 is a bit pricey

M666 EVO

1,127 posts

169 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Haynes do a good one for £35. More for kids but cool none the less.

Limpet

6,516 posts

168 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Looks like a more sophisticated version of the Haynes engine. I built one of those a few years ago, and really enjoyed it.

V8 TEJ

375 posts

168 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Yep I've had the Haynes one for a few years now too. It's actually very similar to this with the battery pack, led 'spark' plugs, and sound.

I reckon these will reduce in price over time just as the Haynes one has smile

Nice that someone goes to the effort of producing them.

Richard A

181 posts

183 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
morgrp said:
Hmm thats too much for me - 50-70 quid I'd be tempted to buy one but £130 is a bit pricey
I have seen the price of this dip briefly down to the high £60s while it's been on my Amazon wishlist though it's normally (as it is at time of posting) around the £100 mark --> https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003FNJLOK/

I wasn't tempted, I'm doing a top end tidy up on a real one this winter, that's enough for me.

Also, it's a shame they didn't include a clear plastic airflow cowl to slip over the engine, otherwise the fan doesn't really make 'sense'.

anonymous-user

61 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
Has any company come out with a battery at 1:4 scale to keep that lot happy?

markkeo

30 posts

151 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
If there’s a version of the Mercedes M156 V8, with the authentic AMG sound, I could be interested (a lot cheaper than a C63...)

unsprung

5,817 posts

131 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all

It would be even more fun if they could offer the engine from a Trabant. No matter how many times you build it, there are always left over parts -- different parts each time! -- and it leaks from the moment you finish.


canucklehead

416 posts

153 months

Wednesday 15th November 2017
quotequote all
How soon before people start fitting hotter cams and lightweight exhausts to this little beauty?

Peppka

114 posts

197 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Would much prefer an Alfa Romeo Busso V6 with the 6 chrome inlet manifold pipes a far better looking engine IMO.

Halmyre

11,545 posts

146 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Nah, you want this:



ChimpOnGas

9,637 posts

186 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Further proof everything on a Porsche is always more expensive!

Build yourself a Porsche flat six for £100...

http://www.qwerkity.com/build-your-own-porsche-911...

Or for half the money, build yourself a proper V8 with two more cylinders, two more pistons, two more con rods. ect ect ect.

http://www.qwerkity.com/build-your-own-v8-car-engi...

The Porsche world is a license to print money, even a model engine is twice the price rofl

Schemauk

30 posts

117 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
£100 on Amazon for anyone actually interested.

Pip S

1 posts

84 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
[quote=Richard A]

I have seen the price of this dip briefly down to the high £60s while it's been on my Amazon wishlist though it's normally (as it is at time of posting) around the £100 mark --> https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003FNJLOK/

Hi Richard I got caught out with this - the kit in your link is not the same as the one in the review - your link shows a kit made for children which is not endorsed by Porsche and has fewer parts!

WCZ

10,798 posts

201 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
how much power does it actually produce

MBBlat

1,835 posts

156 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Pip S]ichard A said:
I have seen the price of this dip briefly down to the high £60s while it's been on my Amazon wishlist though it's normally (as it is at time of posting) around the £100 mark --> https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003FNJLOK/

Hi Richard I got caught out with this - the kit in your link is not the same as the one in the review - your link shows a kit made for children which is not endorsed by Porsche and has fewer parts!
Amazon have both versions https://www.amazon.co.uk/Porsche-Flat-Six-Boxer-En...

Looking at the specs - both made by the same company just one has Porsche in large letters on the front and costs £30 more, part count is >280 and 290, so not a lot of different there, could just be a handfull of extra screws.

Looks to me like a UK/US boxing and a German (Porsche Museum?) boxing ie same kit, different package. Don't have either so might be wrong.