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View Full Version : Now a CGT wrecked @ NY - story included with surprise ending


bmagni
11-27-2006, 08:32 PM
http://img469.imageshack.us/img469/5854/02jq8.th.jpg (http://img469.imageshack.us/my.php?image=02jq8.jpg) http://img153.imageshack.us/img153/4316/03ez3.th.jpg (http://img153.imageshack.us/my.php?image=03ez3.jpg) http://img469.imageshack.us/img469/6752/04jn2.th.jpg (http://img469.imageshack.us/my.php?image=04jn2.jpg) http://img469.imageshack.us/img469/5793/05fz2.th.jpg (http://img469.imageshack.us/my.php?image=05fz2.jpg) http://img153.imageshack.us/img153/2189/06ky2.th.jpg (http://img153.imageshack.us/my.php?image=06ky2.jpg)

5vz-fe
11-27-2006, 08:34 PM
Looks like the pole won!

RC45
11-27-2006, 08:51 PM
Think they'll ticket the driver for "Standing" in a "No Standing Zone" - or just shoot him? ;)

stmoritzer
11-28-2006, 04:59 AM
^ thought the same when I saw the pic :lol:
I guess the passengers survived (thanks to the monocoque)

Stoopie
11-28-2006, 05:13 AM
I bid €5 for the engine, it still looks pretty good ;) Hey it's better than trashing it! :D

Erez
11-28-2006, 05:17 AM
^ yeah.. the monocoque saved some life so far it seems..
and it shows why the poles tech should be upgraded.. those shown at 5th gear once
could have saved a lot of people (and cars..)

davide
11-28-2006, 06:27 AM
Polehugger!

Shame on the GT... hopefully no one got seriously injured.

cooperluke
11-28-2006, 07:06 AM
Poor CGT.... :?

bmagni
11-28-2006, 02:10 PM
^ thought the same when I saw the pic :lol:
I guess the passengers survived (thanks to the monocoque)

yeah, driver only had broken leg and bruised arm

TopGearNL
11-28-2006, 02:20 PM
CGT Vs Pole --> Pole

Shame to see it wrecked, driver should have broken both legs, now he's still able to drive!

EnzoLover
11-28-2006, 02:24 PM
:( :( :( :( :(

One more...

deth
11-28-2006, 02:51 PM
Think they'll ticket the driver for "Standing" in a "No Standing Zone" - or just shoot him? ;)

ya....that pole was probably under survailance too...so 50+ bullets sounds about right :roll:

bmagni
11-28-2006, 09:58 PM
The accident apparently took place last Saturday during a party. Both the car's owner and the driver at the time of the accident were in attendance. The owner let the other driver, a prominent businessman, take the Carrera GT out for a spin. As you might imagine, it was a spirited drive, as the Carrera GT is an obscenely powerful piece of machinery.

That kind of power commands a great deal of respect, and accidents can and do happen even with seasoned, trained drivers behind the wheel. In this case, it appears that the car proved to be more than this person bargained for, and it hit the utility pole at what appears to have been a significant rate of speed, based on how far into the bodywork it's lodged.
The driver thankfully escaped with a broken foot. It could have been worse. It could have been tragic. This is an aspect that's easily lost on us as we try to think up snarky and witty things to say about the photos. Somebody could have been killed -- the driver, a pedestrian, another motorist. Miraculously, the only injury suffered was minor.

Oh yeah. And the car appears to be totaled, much to the chagrin of Porschephiles. But here's the part you aren't reading anywhere else: the man who wrecked the car made good. As we mentioned, he happened to be a very big businessman, and we now know that he's also a standup guy. He bought the car's owner another Carrera GT the next day. With lower mileage on the odometer to boot.

dutchmasterflex
11-28-2006, 10:14 PM
Damn.. I woner where in NY that was.. almost looks like it could of been in my hometown.

I'm sure if you had the money a replacing the CGT would be expected.. but can you imagine having to buy one just because you totalled your buddies?!

RC45
11-28-2006, 10:40 PM
As we mentioned, he happened to be a very big businessman, and we now know that he's also a standup guy. He bought the car's owner another Carrera GT the next day. With lower mileage on the odometer to boot.[/quote]

If true, this goes to show why he was willing to hit the go pedal as hard as he did ;)

ViperASR
11-29-2006, 12:09 AM
That would really suck to have to buy your buddy a CGT just to replace the one that you totaled. I want the brakes though :twisted:

Mattk
11-29-2006, 02:22 AM
Wow, that's some crash. :shock:

callen
11-30-2006, 11:54 AM
ouch! and i thought i spent too much money when i go out on the town :wink:

jorge
11-30-2006, 12:22 PM
poor thing :cry:

RC45
12-06-2006, 02:31 AM
So - is the first story posted in thsi thread true?

Or is it a bucket of tripe?

http://www.nypost.com/seven/12012006/news/regionalnews/from_440g_to_a_wreck_in_1_sec_regionalnews_dan_man gan.htm

Looks like the repair shop crashed it - and their insurance is paying for the repairs.


FROM 440G TO A WRECK IN 1 SEC
SHOP CRASHES BIG SHOT'S PORSCHE
By DAN MANGAN
BIG WHEEL: Robert Greenhill took his Porsche Carrera GT in for repairs. He'll never get it back.
December 1, 2006 -- A renowned investment banker dropped off his precious half-million-dollar Porsche for some minor body work - only to learn that the mechanic plowed the spectacular car into a pole in Westchester while returning it.

Robert Greenhill, a past president of Morgan Stanley and former chairman and CEO of Smith Barney, owned the rare, silver Porsche Carrera GT.

The 604-horsepower auto is both frighteningly fast, with a top speed of 205 mph, and extremely expensive - it carries a $440,000 sticker price.

Porsche expects to manufacture only 1,500 of the futuristic-looking speed machines over a three-year span.

Christopher Numme, the owner of the body shop in the town of Port Chester, said he did minor repairs to the car's body - but while he was driving it back to a Greenwich, Conn., dealership the day after Thanksgiving, he lost control and crashed it.

At 9:15 a.m., Numme, a married father of three, pulled out of his shop, with a buddy in the passenger seat, and headed toward Greenwich.

Shortly afterward, Numme, 48, spotted a truck inching past a stop sign in Port Chester and realized they were on a collision course.

Numme said it was too late to hit the brakes, so he swerved around the truck and upshifted to second gear.

The car spun out of control and leaped onto the sidewalk.

"That car just acted as if it were on a sheet of black ice and careened into that telephone pole," said Numme, adding that he had not been speeding when the auto lost control.

The front end of the car wrapped itself around the pole.

Witness David de LaRosa told The Post that the crash "was very, very loud. I thought those guys died.

"But I [then] saw the two men come out of the car and start walking. It was surprising."

"You have to count your blessings," said Numme, who suffered only a broken foot in the sensational smashup.

"A car can be replaced, but a human life can't be."

Numme - who would not reveal Greenhill as the owner of the car - was not cited by police for any violation.

His passenger suffered neck and back pain.

"To walk away from that, I'm thankful," Numme said. "I've been repairing cars for 30 years, and this is the first accident I've ever been in.

"It makes you reconsider [how you appreciate] a lot of things - your wife, your family."

Asked who would pay for the Porsche, Numme said his insurance company "is covering everything."

Greenhill did not return several calls seeking comment.

Greenhill, 70, founded the Park Avenue investment bank Greenhill & Co. after leaving Morgan Stanley and Smith Barney.

Two years ago, the Greenwich resident and his wife, Gayle, endowed Harvard Business School, his alma mater, with $15 million to support its global research efforts.

Asked how Greenhill reacted, Numme said, "We spoke to people, and their main concern was as long as everybody is OK, and as long as his car is being replaced," they were satisfied.


[email protected]

saadie
12-06-2006, 03:47 AM
Numme said it was too late to hit the brakes, so he swerved around the truck and upshifted to second gear.
"That car just acted as if it were on a sheet of black ice and careened into that telephone pole," said Numme, adding that he had not been speeding when the auto lost control.

this is what happens when you floor the acclerator on a supercar 8)
he could consider getting one in white. :D 8)

bmagni
12-06-2006, 06:09 PM
So - is the first story posted in thsi thread true?

Or is it a bucket of tripe?

http://www.nypost.com/seven/12012006/news/regionalnews/from_440g_to_a_wreck_in_1_sec_regionalnews_dan_man gan.htm

Looks like the repair shop crashed it - and their insurance is paying for the repairs.


FROM 440G TO A WRECK IN 1 SEC
SHOP CRASHES BIG SHOT'S PORSCHE
By DAN MANGAN
BIG WHEEL: Robert Greenhill took his Porsche Carrera GT in for repairs. He'll never get it back.
December 1, 2006 -- A renowned investment banker dropped off his precious half-million-dollar Porsche for some minor body work - only to learn that the mechanic plowed the spectacular car into a pole in Westchester while returning it.

Robert Greenhill, a past president of Morgan Stanley and former chairman and CEO of Smith Barney, owned the rare, silver Porsche Carrera GT.

The 604-horsepower auto is both frighteningly fast, with a top speed of 205 mph, and extremely expensive - it carries a $440,000 sticker price.

Porsche expects to manufacture only 1,500 of the futuristic-looking speed machines over a three-year span.

Christopher Numme, the owner of the body shop in the town of Port Chester, said he did minor repairs to the car's body - but while he was driving it back to a Greenwich, Conn., dealership the day after Thanksgiving, he lost control and crashed it.

At 9:15 a.m., Numme, a married father of three, pulled out of his shop, with a buddy in the passenger seat, and headed toward Greenwich.

Shortly afterward, Numme, 48, spotted a truck inching past a stop sign in Port Chester and realized they were on a collision course.

Numme said it was too late to hit the brakes, so he swerved around the truck and upshifted to second gear.

The car spun out of control and leaped onto the sidewalk.

"That car just acted as if it were on a sheet of black ice and careened into that telephone pole," said Numme, adding that he had not been speeding when the auto lost control.

The front end of the car wrapped itself around the pole.

Witness David de LaRosa told The Post that the crash "was very, very loud. I thought those guys died.

"But I [then] saw the two men come out of the car and start walking. It was surprising."

"You have to count your blessings," said Numme, who suffered only a broken foot in the sensational smashup.

"A car can be replaced, but a human life can't be."

Numme - who would not reveal Greenhill as the owner of the car - was not cited by police for any violation.

His passenger suffered neck and back pain.

"To walk away from that, I'm thankful," Numme said. "I've been repairing cars for 30 years, and this is the first accident I've ever been in.

"It makes you reconsider [how you appreciate] a lot of things - your wife, your family."

Asked who would pay for the Porsche, Numme said his insurance company "is covering everything."

Greenhill did not return several calls seeking comment.

Greenhill, 70, founded the Park Avenue investment bank Greenhill & Co. after leaving Morgan Stanley and Smith Barney.

Two years ago, the Greenwich resident and his wife, Gayle, endowed Harvard Business School, his alma mater, with $15 million to support its global research efforts.

Asked how Greenhill reacted, Numme said, "We spoke to people, and their main concern was as long as everybody is OK, and as long as his car is being replaced," they were satisfied.


[email protected]



yeah, the first story was phony

Mattk
12-09-2006, 03:00 AM
^Yeah, it is. The real story is boring.