First among equals

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If you’re looking for a distinctive Porsche 911, this 1965 right-hand-drive factory prototype is a drive-away museum piece

Teutonic trailblazer MMU 911C was the first right-hand-drive Porsche 911 on British soil. Below: it’s in original condition inside and out

According to Michael Bennett-Levy – famous as a collector of everything, in particular early technology and TV sets – the first example of anything is always worth buying, (almost) regardless of the price.

Bennett-Levy died in 2016, but were he alive today he’d probably be urging us to hold up our paddles at Bonhams during this year’s annual Bond Street sale and bid for the Bali Blue Porsche 911 pictured here – because it’s the first right-hand-drive 911 ever made.

A factory prototype built by Porsche’s ‘experimental division’, the car was collected from Germany by employees of AFN, the Isleworth, Middlesex dealer that had been the official importer of Porsche cars in Britain since 1954 prior to the founding of Porsche Cars GB in ’65 .

Having been driven back to the UK on export plates – in tandem with AFN’s last 356 demonstrator – the car was given the appropriate registration mark MMU 911C and first taxed for the road on April 1.

Being the first 911 on British shores it was initially used by AFN both for dealer training and as a rolling test bed for mechanical improvements – but it was soon sold to first owner Derek Pobjoy, who had recently founded the private Pobjoy Mint that specialised in making commemorative coins and tokens (but is scheduled to close its doors at the end of 2023).

Pobjoy returned MMU 911C to AFN and collected a brand new 911 as soon as the first official customer cars reached the UK in the late summer of 1965, after which it remained wi

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