zmotorsports
ALLIANCE MEMBER
The devil is in the details Tim and you and your team nailed the details. Well done. 
Targa is looking amazing! I was at the National Naval Aviation Museum here in Pensacola last week preparing for my upcoming retirement ceremony. They have a Corvette C8 roped off just adjacent to Cabot Flight Deck on display from a local Chevrolet dealer and it has a similar paint scheme, but from what I can tell, it is just a factory blue available with the dual-gold stripes, not nearly the detail you have put into the Targa beauty.
Back in the day when I knew a lot of the Blue Angel team members (they are all the young guys by design and now I am old at 51), one of my friends who was on the team told me that when the landed on a Thursday for an airshow a local Chevrolet dealer had 6 brand new blue Corvettes waiting for them, with their side number painted on the side in yellow, and the dealership owner just handed them the keys and said "have fun this weekend." If you are going to be King, might as well be King Kong!
The devil is in the details Tim and you and your team nailed the details. Well done.![]()
Coming from you that means a lot! I can only imagine what one of these cars would look like if you built it!


You guys are incredibly kind!
I’m grateful for the shout outs I truly am!
Not sure how to respond tbh other than thank you!
Famous last words!I am done for the most part buying any kind of sockets or wrenches.
Gorgeous!
I have to tell myself that otherwise there is no justification for the current purchaseFamous last words!
Gorgeous!
Humility is an absolute requirement to be chosen to join the team. There is no place for (outward facing) hubris when flying fighters on the Blue Angel team or otherwise despite what popular movies might portray. There is a great documentary about 20 years old that profiled the entire selection process and it did not pull any punches, the team allowed full access to the filming crew. As always, I guarantee that the USN had final approval for the final cut, but the final version was very legit.Thank you and that is a great story! LOL you are not old at 51 i am just a couple years behind you!
I had sort of the same experience. We were at a race about a decade ago and the blue angels team was in our garage for the weekend hanging out. Just built different those guys are. They were awesome, humble, fun to be around, but at the end of the day you knew they were top dogs.










Even the grub is premium, love it
HAHA idk about that!
I am a bit of a foodie and have shared some pasta recipes on GJ somewhere in the recent past







You still need the knowledge to use them. Which you certainly have!I wish we had scope data and tooling like this when I was coming up in the ranks!
Here is a fun one from this morning!
A M505 Slant Nose came in (real one) from out east. Had been at a shop there but they were struggling to sort it out. I do not know the whole story but it has some drivability issues.
Love these cars and as rare as they are I am not sure whey they never took off - This one being a Cab is SUPER rare….
First thing check fuel leaking down - Plug up the return line with some hose pinch off pliers and let it sit for a couple minutes - I think service data says 10 minutes but you know right away if there is an issue or not. This one for sure has an issue and looks like the injectors are leaking down. Let’s prove that - we should have cylinder misfires if the mechanical injectors are not firing perfectly. Right?
Grab a quick handheld scope as we didn’t have a free rack at the moment and I just wanted to give this guy a quick accurate diag. The parts cannon had been thrown at it with new plugs, wires, accumulator etc.
Easiest cylinder to get at is #5 so threw an inductive on that one just so we could identify cylinders
Next we threw a pressure transducer in the exhaust and ran it for 20 seconds.
Here is the screen capture. Cylinder 5 has the obvious misfire car needs injectors as we concluded. It is just nice to have the data to back it up for the customer so he knows we aren’t guessing at it.
Here is a better look at it. Cylinder five has channel 2 inductive pickup on the plug wire. That identifies where the cylinders are in the patter. That just so happens to have the least amount of air on the compressions stroke of any of the cylinders. This is at idle mind you imagine what that looks like under load!
It has a good healthy spark at 12kv which tells me plug gaps are set ok and there is no issue with the wires etc. Higher voltage is tell tale of more resistance and thus a rich condition - this one looks perfect
Injectors I think is the right call. It is old mechanical injected CIS stuff. Interested in what you guys think! Did we get it right?
I wish we had scope data and tooling like this when I was coming up in the ranks!
Non intrusive testing and joined up thinking![]()
You still need the knowledge to use them. Which you certainly have!
















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1996-1997 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S Aerokit in White is my grail car. Someday..... me in the drivers seat and our golden retriever sticking her head out of the passengers side window.
Love the attention to detail in all of your posts!
Thank you for the info on the specific chemicals you used on this part of the project.
Expensive yes, but anyone who has every pulled an A/C package knows that they would rather no do it again.
Was able to see the "short". Sounds good. Looks good.
No Instagram account, so can't read the comments.
Why give a flying **** about the comments anyway? How many of them have the 7 figures to throw down for a project like that?
As long as you and your customer is good with it, that's all that matters.
Can comments be turned off?
There were a lot of supportive and positive comments Tim. Unfortunately, the keyboard warriors also all have to chime in as they know everything and most have never done anything to speak of yet they feel they are the experts. Social media is a mixed bag for sure. I despise it at times, much of the time actually. Glad I don't have a lot of followers.Hell, I have a hard enough time with some of the negativity or off-handed comments I get here and find myself having to take a break every once in a while, and I love this forum.
Yeah people on the internet are a special breed. Takes a special person to write hateful stuff and sit there and enjoy reading it.
It comes with the territory. I have said it before and I will say it again I personally do not give a F*** but I feel bad for the people who put the hours in at the shop to make the content and they have to read the stuff.
The stuff you do is so perfect I highly doubt that a guy like you gets negativity!
I always love to read what is going on with you in and around the shop and family!. THANK YOU!! for the time and effort to include us. I have a simple question hopefully it is not too "simple" curious... why did you get the call on the white slant nose as oppose to a dealer to find the issue? granted I understand that you are the porsche guy... just curious as indicated that other shop(s) were not able to fix issue ,just through parts at it... thanks again for your time and effort!
Thank you for the support! I wish I had that answer for you as I really don’t know. We see it all the time, people send in from hundreds of miles away for service. Just this past week we got a 993 turbo from Ohio for maintenance - and a 997 turbo from NJ for a stiff clutch.
These are all B skill level jobs so I really have no explanation for it - why people send from so far away, adding 2-3g on to the bill for transport on simple jobs.
I think most of it is brand awareness from our marketing outreach, on the big ticket stuff I get it (engines etc) but the maintenance stuff blows my mind.
Having said that I am super grateful for the work! Just do not understand the logic. There is a TON of bad work out there. Wish I could show it online but I am not that kind of guy.

I don't have an instagram account so I can't read the comments, I can only imagine and there are obviously some negative sentiments which stinks. As much as anyone can say "just ignore it," I understand that it is difficult to read regardless, especially for something that your shop took so much pride in constructing and the owner who paid a lot of money to get exactly what he wanted. I can understand with taking a break, but I think you guys did a superb job on that car. In the end, as long as the customer is happy you knocked it out of the park.I’m kind of done with with internet this week… just read the comments.
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Olsen Motorsports on Instagram: "Build in process* The owner of this Blue Angel commission is in for a look! 👀 #porscherestoration #porsche911 #olsenmotorsports #oneofone #builtbyhand #porscheengine"
6,503 likes, 0 comments - olsenmotorsport on July 28, 2025: "Build in process* The owner of this Blue Angel commission is in for a look! 👀 #porscherestoration #porsche911 #olsenmotorsports #oneofone #builtbyhand #porscheengine".www.instagram.com