VW Beetle
The
Volkswagen Beetle or
Bug is a small family
car, the best known car of
Volkswagen, of
Germany, and almost certainly the
world. Thanks to its distinctive shape and sound, its reliability, and presumably other factors, it now enjoys a "
cult" status.
The Beetle has been in production in various forms since
1938, interrupted only by the
Second World War.
History

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A VW Beetle
The origins of the car date back to 1930s Nazi Germany. Adolf Hitler's desire that almost anybody should be able to afford a car fit with a proposal by car designer Ferdinand Porsche (1875-1952) The intention was that ordinary working Germans would buy the car by means of a savings scheme. Prototypes of the car called the KdF-Wagen (German: Kraft durch Freude = strength through joy), appeared from 1936 onwards (the very first prototypes have been produced in Stuttgart). The car already had its distinctive round shape - designed by Erwin Komenda - and air-cooled, flat-four, rear-mounted engine. However the factory (in the new town of Kdf-Stadt, purpose-built for the factory workers), had only produced a handful of cars by the time war started in 1939. Consequently the first volume-produced versions of the car's chassis if not body were military vehicles, the jeep-like Kübelwagen (approx. 52,000) and the amphibious Schwimmwagen (approx. 14,000). Deliberately designed to be as simple as possible mechanically, there was simply less that could go wrong; the radiator-less air-cooled 985 cm³ 25 hp (19 kW) motors proved especially effective in action in North Africa's desert heat.
Much of the Beetle's design was inspired by the advanced Tatra cars of Hans Ledwinka. Tatra sued, but the lawsuit was stopped when Germany invaded Czechoslovakia. The matter was re-opened after WW2 and in 1961 Volkswagen paid Tatra 3,000,000 Deutsche Marks.
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1968 VW Beetle
The Volkswagen company owes its postwar existence largely to one man, British army officer Major Ivan Hirst (1916-2000). Post-war, he was ordered to take control of the heavily bombed factory, which the Americans had captured. He persuaded the British military to order 20,000 of the cars, and by 1946 the factory was producing 1000 cars a month. The car and its town changed their Nazi-era names, to Volkswagen (
people's car) and
Wolfsburg. First 1,785 Beetles were made in a factory near Wolfsburg in
1945.
Production of the "Type 1" VW Beetle (German: 'Käfer', US: 'Bug', French: 'Coccinelle', Mexico: 'Vocho', Brazil: 'Fusca') increased dramatically over the years, the 1 millionth one rolling off the assembly line in 1954. During the
1960s and early
1970s innovative
advertising campaigns and a glowing reputation for reliability and sturdiness helped production figures to surpass the levels of the previous record holder, the
Ford Model T, when Beetle No. 15,007,034 was produced; by
1973 total production was over 16 million.
Faced with stiff competition from economical Japanese autos, sales began dropping off in the mid 1970s. There had been several unsuccessful attempts to replace the Beetle throughout the 1960s; but the
Type 3,
Type 4 (411) and the NSU-based
K70 were all momentous flops. Finally, production lines at Wolfsburg switched to the new water-cooled, front engined, front wheel drive
Golf in
1974, a car unlike its predecessor in most significant ways. Beetle production continued in smaller numbers at other German factories until
1978, but mainstream production shifted to
Brazil and
Mexico. Volkswagen sold Beetles in the
United States until
1978 and in
Europe until the mid-
1980s.
Like its competitors the
Mini and the
Citroën 2CV, the Beetle has been regarded as something of a "cult" car since its
1960s association with the
hippie movement. Sales of the Volkswagen Beetle model exceeded those of
Ford Model-T (15 million) on
February 17,
1972 and by
2002 there had been over 21 million produced. Production continued in Mexico until mid-
2003.
From
1968 to
1997 a white Beetle with racing numbers and stripes named Herbie played a starring role in
The Love Bug series of Disney comedy films.
New Beetle and phase out
New Beetle Cabrio
In 1998 Volkswagen launched the nostalgic New Beetle, a car technically unrelated to the original in any way, being based on the Golf, but deliberately reminiscent of the original's rounded shape. Marketing campaigns have stoked the continued goodwill people have towards the original, and helped the new model to inherit it to some extent. The mechanicals are shared with the other
Volkswagen A platform cars.
In
2002 total production of the
VW Golf, at 22 million units, overtook that of the Beetle. However this measure includes all four distinct generations of Golf since
1974.
By
2003 annual production had fallen to 30,000 from a peak of 1.3 million. On
July 30,
2003, the final original VW Beetle (No. 21,529,464) was produced at the last remaining production facility in
Puebla,
Mexico, some 65 years since its public launch in Nazi Germany, and an unprecedented 58-year production run since 1945. VW announced this step in June, citing decreasing demand. The last car was immediately shipped off to the company's museum in
Wolfsburg, Germany. In true Mexican fashion, a
mariachi band serenaded the last car.
The final edition had the following specifications:
- Length: 13.32 ft (4 m)\n*Width: 5.08 ft (1.6 m)\n*Height: 4.92 ft (1.5 m)\n*Length between axles: 7.87 ft (2.4 m)\n*Weight: 1,786 pounds (810 kg)\n*Engine: 4 cylinders, 1.6 L\n*Transmission: Manual\n*Brakes: front disc, back drum\n*Passengers: Five\n*Tank: 10.57 gallons (40 L)\n*Colors: Aquarius blue, Harvestmoon beige.
External link
\n* ODP Beetle directory
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