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My mother had one. Probably a late '60s model. I got to drive it only once. Super simple design. Four on the floor & that oh-so unique engine sound. The only problem was she didn't get the optional heater & we lived in upstate NY so it didn't get warm inside until we were almost to school, 35 minutes after starting.
I know that the roof luggage racks are very popular with the people who restore their old VW bugs, but in the 1960's you would almost never see them on the Bugs that were driving around. Yes, this is a contemporary video, it is NOT from the 1960's. It is well made, but still, it's new.
This brilliant marketing piece puts me in mind of the award-winning Chernobyl series some years back on HBO. At one point facing an out of control radioactive environment ,the Soviets brought in a robot from Germany to fight the outbreak. When unlike all its predecessors this robot did not stop, a single comment by a Soviet scientist proved the most amusing of the entire series. “The Germans.”
The car of my youth my father had three from 1959 throughout the 60’s I had a 1969 beetle in 1979 and a German 1967 beetle in 1980 while working as a student in Munich.
I learned how to drive in a 1954 Volkswagen, my dad drove it back-and-forth to work every day and it had over 300,000 miles on it, he had to rebuild the motor twice and I help with that also. What a great vehicle.
Dann hat er aber Nie auf der Autobahn im Sommer Vollgas gegeben. Der Käfer ist einfach nicht Vollgasfest, im Winter ein tolles Auto, im Sommer ohne zusätzlichen Ölkühler unbrauchbar.
I owned six Rabbits in my life, three of them Diesels. But they all got to be so old, and so much of a pain in the ass, that I gave up! I sold my last one three years ago. Now, a crippled old man, I need the luxury and ease of an automatic minivan with all the toys. Plus it holds my electric cart, and even charges it up. But I loved them in their day, and once got 56 MPG out of one of them!
Our first family car was that model. My father had bought it second hand before he had passed his driving test. I d been at my grandparents waiting for him to come and pick me up. Having failed his test twice he was put in with a group of equally anxious guy. Waiting in the pub for each one to be tested. My grandfather a long distance lorry driver decided that even by the standards of the time that he would drive us home. My first car was also a beetle. Many a car since but none as simple and practical
Not many people speak of the high quality of Beetle manufacture. My 1971 Beetle (Headlight Dress Rings) are chrome on brass. Rust can never show there! The front and rear bumpers are triple-chromed, and are 53 years old with not one bit of rust. All of the Beetle Side Strips are Stainless Steel, and polish-up like brand new. The Hub Caps are also Stainless Steel. The Beetle Body (made from quality steel) survives where many other Car Manufacturers fail.......... Have I said enough?
@@peterduxbury927 Well, I don't want Volkswagen Beetles to stop beinging made, because there is one VW Beetle I love the most and that's Herbie The Love Bug. I've been wishing and wishing that VW beetles will somehow make a comeback and That there will be more new movies of Herbie. And I'll continue wishing until they do.🤞🤞🙏
Say it again - Not from 1960. But by the way, people who keep saying you know it's not from 1960, because the quality is good, should go look at a Blu Ray of Ben Hur or The Great Escape.
Yeah, like 1. The camera graphics are too good for 1960s 2. There are some 2000s golfs in the background 3. Just too easy to spot this was not made in 1960s