Los Angeles Times

A Porsche 911 the way you want it

- By Sue Callaway

“It’s crazy, isn’t it?” says Drew Coblitz with a laugh. The 31-yearold Philadelph­ia-based luxury expert and entreprene­ur is the owner of Singer Vehicle Design’s latest work of art, a gloriously up-leveled and optimized 1990 Porsche 911. I’m laughing too, but mostly because of the visceral reactions his meticulous­ly specced, inky-blue-black car is provoking in me.

For a few high-speed moments I’m the lucky one in his driver’s seat, a work of woven-leather art in its own right. With the handcarved ebony wood shifter knob in my right hand (pretty much every detail, from the car’s tuning down to literal nuts and bolts, is customized by Singer for each client) and my feet dancing across all three pedals, I’m in internal combustion heaven. Coblitz’s one-off is a formidable yet nimble sports car with a howling, high-revving soul, hellbent on devouring the curvaceous canyon road we’re on as though it might never see another.

Singer Vehicle Design is a skunkworks hidden away in Sun Valley that optimizes Porsche 911s from 1989 to 1994, the era that purists consider the pinnacle of the German manufactur­er’s aircooled engineerin­g. These are not merely restored sports cars, though; these are masterpiec­es of next-gen engineerin­g, materials science and haute couture-level interiors. Think of them as the automotive equivalent of Fabergé eggs on steroids. Or to personify it all, imagine Sean Connery’s 007 crossed with Charlize Theron and blended with a dash of Joaquin Phoenix’s Joker: sexy, strong, audacious — and ultimately brilliant.

The man behind Singer is Rob Dickinson, a wickedly witty Brit and former songwriter and lead singer of the ’90s rock band Catherine Wheel. Since the first 911 he spotted in 1970 as a 5-year-old, he’s been smitten. Finally, after a stint designing at Lotus Cars before focusing on his music and a world tour with his band before they broke up in 2000 — with lots of tinkering on his own cars in between — Dickinson landed in Los Angeles to buy a 1969 911 E and fell in love with its rich car culture. By 2009, he started Singer. “We’re taking a legend that Porsche put to one side 20 years ago to pursue other, forward-looking cars,” says Dickinson. “We have the benefit of hindsight, and I’d like to think we are shining quite a bright light on Porsche’s heritage.”

So what does an “insane” Singer detail look like? On every production car— even Mercedes and Ferrari models — there’s a gap between panels — the door and the rear fender, for example. Run your hand over the gap between panels and if one is higher or lower, they aren’t flush. “If you take a caliper and measure our gaps and flush, they will be perfect on every car,” says Mazen Fawaz, Singer managing director, tech entreprene­ur and Formula One legend Jenson Button’s teammate for this year’s Baja 1000. “It sounds silly, but you have one shot at getting those perfect. If they aren’t, a car doesn’t leave our hands.”

Every car that passes through a Singer transforma­tion requires a minimum of 4,000 human hours. Customers can spend up to a year speccing every detail from performanc­e upgrades to interiors. There are 13 types and 500 colors of leather to sort through — each car uses seven hides — and limitless paint options. The leather is handstitch­ed in the company’s Orange County interiors studio, overseen by Andy Harrison, who has mastermind­ed the insides of important machines such as the McLaren F1, Formula 1 cars, Lotuses, Jaguar super cars, the DeLorean and even SpaceX rockets. “One owner showed us a photo of a sunset,” says Harrison. “We ended up using nearly a dozen different colors in the weave for the seats — a weave that is only achievable by a few companies in the world.”

Coblitz, one of Singer’s youngest customers, went into the commission­ing with a specific vision. “I wanted to do a murdered-out Singer because people very often go for the very pretty, very bright colors or the heritage colors, which are awesome,” he says. “But I wanted something more modern and edgy.”

That led to months of testing dozens of exterior paint solutions. Coblitz finally landed on a shade of dark blue that looks black in certain light conditions, while others highlight the depth of the navy. He also worked with the Singer team to change all the metal trim to dark nickel, something no other customer had requested. He even came up with a name for the car that Singer turned into a dark nickel-plated aluminum alloy nameplate on the rear deck lid: SINQNON, a reference to the Latin for “essential to existence,” sine qua non.

“I don’t usually name my cars,” Coblitz says. “But it was my take on Rob’s ‘everything is important’ mantra.” He’s referring to a now hallowed moment early on at the Singer headquarte­rs when Dickinson, frustrated by others not grasping the depth of his desire for perfection, grabbed a can of black spray paint and memorializ­ed those words on the shop wall.

It’s time, though, to rip the bandage off and talk price. A 911 reimagined by Singer will set you back a minimum of $475,000 for a classic coupe, not including the car each customer must provide. In today’s collector-car market, that base vehicle can cost $48,000 and up. (Singer Vehicle Design isn’t a dealer, but the company can offer some direction.) “There’s a high cost to what we do. Everything we do doesn’t have to be expensive, but it does have to be brilliant. I only want to build cars that make my mouth go dry I want them so much.”

That may not sound like a winning business model — the road is littered with failed attempts to restore, modify, hot rod or otherwise tweak famous models — but against all odds, Singer is celebratin­g its 10th anniversar­y this year and steadily growing. The company has delivered 130 cars and has as many on order.

Dickinson’s vision, while laserfocus­ed on making brilliant machines, also has a restless side. Last year the company debuted an ultra-rare, limited-edition version referred to as the DLS. It was co-created with the engineerin­g arm of the U.K.-based Williams Formula 1 team, Michelin and other partners. Only 75 will be made, with a base price of $1.8 million.

The company’s design standards have branched out beyond automotive. In 2017, Dickinson collaborat­ed with Italian watch designer Marco Borraccino, former head designer at Panerai. The resulting company, Singer Reimagined, is creating high-end watches that pay homage to the iconic sports models of the 1960s and 1970s.

And while he won’t comment on his plans, Dickinson says he’s only just begun to apply his aesthetic to other objects he deeply desires.

I asked him when, in the flurry of the last 10 years’ worth of hard labor, occasional cash flow worries and scaling a custom-car business into a limited-production concern, he picked his head up and realized his success. “The first time, it was walking into a Starbucks in Northern England and being recognized — not for my music but because they’d seen all of our car videos on YouTube and were die-hard fans,” Dickinson says. “The second moment was when my son saw a journalist interviewi­ng Jay-Z while driving together in one of our cars. He turned from the TV to look at me with an awe and respect I’d never seen before.”

 ?? Drew Phillips Singer Vehicle Design ?? THIS Singer-customized Porsche 911 has striped espresso suede seats and an ebony shift knob.
Drew Phillips Singer Vehicle Design THIS Singer-customized Porsche 911 has striped espresso suede seats and an ebony shift knob.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States