lol - i know what i've seen. there is no denying what i've seen.
as for the cooling, nope - they reached the limits of what air cooling could do. in fact, they had to rework the cooling to heat things up a bit for emissions. emissions standards like it hotter, not cooler. i've run into that quite a bit in over 30 years of doing this, and is exactly why pretty much all cars now run over 200F all the time.
are they "reliable"? i guess that depends on your definition. to me, reliable means needing no service. no matter what you say, you can't say that about an early 911. you can make excuses about them all day, and say it's "normal" but if you can't run 25k miles with nothing more than an oil change, it's not "reliable". it's not about how many miles they can accumulate. it's about how many miles between services. by your definition i could poke a new motor into a 968 every year, and say it's completely reliable.
i agree that space provision is a lot less in a mid-engine car, which is why i no longer own one, but now you're trying to defend the 911 based on space, and there isn't any in the early cars. a front engine car gives the best space. it has this thing called a "trunk". the early 911 has almost no space up front, none at all in the rear, and the rear seats are only big enough for 2 adult cats. epic fail on that point.
i have similar stuff here on my shelves touting the porsche wins too. i'm willing to bet that your "documentation" is all porsche based, so of course they will cite examples of when they won. i could match that with 10 times as many examples of when they lost. however, nobody is going to write a book about how a car frequently lost. might make for a pretty funny steve carrel movie though.
yeah - i've read all about the back and forth with porsche and VW. it was a real mess, and in the end, a huge blunder by porsche. it's not the first time they really screwed up either. like i said, that company has been in trouble for a very long time. there is a pretty good documentary being aired lately about it too.
none of this means that i don't respect what porsche did and the successes they had with the bug design. it was a hugely innovative concept. take a super simple design daily driver and make it a race car that can be driven daily. obviously it rang a bell with a number of people. i'm not denying that. i just expect more from a car, which is why i never bought one. i suppose the attraction to many is the spartan simplicity. those same people don't like cupholders either, and i can't live without 2.
porsche fans will defend that car to the death. i have to credit them for their loyalty. however, it doesn't change the car. it just means that those people are willing to put up with it.
this is exactly one of the reasons i am fighting the desire to buy one. i don't want to have to deal with the 911 owners. i really wish somebody else made a car that does what i want. i did when i bought the 968, and i do now that i want the targa. like the 968, i'm going to buy it in spite of it being a porsche, and will remove any emblems and badges that i can.
p.s. - here on this site, you'll find a large number of people who feel the same way i do about the 911. being a 968 enthusiast does not make you a porsche enthusiast, and frequently you will find that the two are as diametrically opposed as the engine locations. most of us feel the 968 is a better car to drive than any 911 up to and including all of the ones built to 95. that's why we own them.