1970s Beetle are really good, I am the son of a 1972 VW Beetle owner and 70s Beetles are just…brill. 1950s Beetles didn’t feature a fuel gauge. They didn’t have a vast engine choice (only 1100 and 1200; 1300, 1500 and 1600 came after the early to mid sixties) and the transmission wasn’t fully synchronised until 1961. In my opinion, I’d say the best years for Beetles were 1954 to 2003. Early Beetles (1932-1952) were just starting off and they weren’t the best looking (not a great deal of chrome, crash gearbox, cable drums).
@@Tinnense3734 there is a yellow VW on karak Highway in Malaysia if you overtake this VM it will again be in front of you but you realise it's a loop overtake, overtake,overtake,overtake, overtake,overtake it you will crash
Anything past 1981 doesn’t do it for me I love my 73 Beetle Edit: I meant 72 my bad Edit 2: VW Beetles stopped production in Germany in 1978. The 1990s Beetle is a 2003 VW Mexican Final Edition which was the last Air Cooled Beetle to be made.
It’s sloping back and is starting to look similar to a Porsche and i think will probably turn into one. For people who don’t know, Porsche ferdinand (the father of Porsche) helped make the first beetle.
The 1940 Beetle is actually a 1965/1966 Beetle There were no Beetles made in 1940, the first ever Beetles to be manufactured were 1938 and they were made in only that because Germany invaded Czech Slovakia because Tatra Sued VW, and then there was WW2 that brought the entire Beetle Production Line to a halt and nearly an end. Thankfully, British Army officer Major Ivan Hurst took over VW and the Beetle lived up until 2003. The Curvy Golf (New Beetle) continued production until 2019.
...good eye... ... definitely not a Beetle from 1940s... ...the closest thing to a 1940s Beetle would be something built for the German military called the 'Kommandeurwagen' - (a four wheel drive variant of the Beetle, something of a stable mate to the Kübellwagen and the Schwimmwagen)