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The Amazing History Of The Volkswagen Beetle


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2022 May 12, 6:06am   297 views  8 comments

by ohomen171   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

#volkswagenbeetle Quite by accident, I had a wonderful and funny time yesterday afternoon. I stumbled upon a long video about the history of the Volkswagen Beetle (Fusca for my Brasilian readers.) If you are curious and want to go in-depth, here is the link:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Beetle?source=patrick.net

In the 1930's Hitler came to power in Germany. He took note of the low level of car ownership among German people. He was building an ultra-modern highway system for Germany called The Autobahn.
Hitler was aware of Henry Ford and his pioneering work with the Model T that made car ownership possible for the average US worker. Hitler commissioned a major automaker to develop a car for the average German worker who only earned a wage of 32 Deutsch marks per week.
The result was a car that we know well-the Volkswagen Beetle. It was a vehicle of great simplicity hiding some incredible innovation. It had an air-cooled engine sitting in the back of the car. Almost 4 decades later, I arrived in Washington, D.C. I was completing my time in the U.S. Navy. I knew that I was in an area with snow and ice. I would need a car that would handle the cold winters. An African American friend gave me some profound and most unexpected advice as follows:
"Bro' get a Volkswagen."
I ended up buying the sports version of the V.W. Beetle-the Karmann Ghia. When ice and snow hit the road, the rear-engine rear-wheel-drive car gave me wonderful traction on the roads.
Only 600 VW Beetles were sold before World War II erupted. The factory was converted to produce military vehicles. At the end of the war, the factory fell into the British zone of occupation. (The Russians kept trying to take over the factory.) Two British Army officers found themselves in charge of the badly damaged factory in Wolfsburg. Major Ivan Hirst was the senior officer. He was not a typical military officer. He was a man of vision. He felt that the German people needed to be rehabilitated. One way to do this was to create a viable auto industry.
He explored the factory, He found two working prototypes of the VW Beetle. He surveyed the factory in great detail. It was a mess, but the main components were in place. He started to clean up and fix the factory. He convinced the British government to make a big investment to bring the factory back to life. He hired an experienced German auto executive to run the factory. It was a controversial choice. The man had never been a Nazi Party member. However, he had worked for the Nazis producing military vehicles.
As they say: "The rest is history." Volkswagen Beetles were eventually sold worldwide. Volkswagen is now one of the largest auto manufacturers in the world.

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1   WookieMan   2022 May 12, 6:27am  

ohomen171 says
I stumbled upon a long video about the history of the Volkswagen Beetle (Fusca for my Brasilian readers.)

Who cares? Nostalgia of it ever being created is one thing, but it's a fucking ugly ass car. It's honestly the gayest car in my opinion. Old or new models. I'd rather have an Aztek.

VW is currently a shit company that will lie to its customers and government agencies around the globe. I wouldn't trust their product. Everyone I know that's had a VW vehicle churns through it in 2-3 years because it sucks. Don't know of a repeat buyer in my sphere unless they love the look of the Beetle, but I generally don't hang out with those types.

Interesting story I suppose, but the Beetle and VW are shit.
2   clambo   2022 May 12, 8:12am  

I had a 1964 Volvo 122S in college, but I cracked it up in a snowstorm. I then bought a VW Bug which was okay but a toy by comparison to the Volvo.

Absolutely everything on the VW was thin and fragile, but it was fun to drive around town.

Highway driving was scary in New England, especially in the winter. It doesn't have a defroster like normal cars.

I gave it to my sister for college and got another used Volvo.
3   RWSGFY   2022 May 12, 8:22am  

LITERALLY HITLER'S CAR! IF YOU HAVE EVER DRIVEN ONE - YOU ARE A NAZI!
4   stereotomy   2022 May 12, 7:42pm  

Whoop there it is - ohomen171 is a closet NAZI admirer?
5   AD   2022 May 12, 11:40pm  

WookieMan says
VW is currently a shit company that will lie to its customers and government agencies around the globe. I wouldn't trust their product. Everyone I know that's had a VW vehicle churns through it in 2-3 years because it sucks.


I bought a Volkswagen Jetta SE, 2010 model in early summer 2010. Sold it in 2021. It was not that bad of a car. Had a $800 oil leak repair in 2020 that I had to fix but that was the only repair; it was the oil filter housing that cracked. I did not have any other repairs owning it for 11 years. It had 160,000 miles when I sold it.
6   WookieMan   2022 May 13, 4:07am  

ad says

WookieMan says
VW is currently a shit company that will lie to its customers and government agencies around the globe. I wouldn't trust their product. Everyone I know that's had a VW vehicle churns through it in 2-3 years because it sucks.


I bought a Volkswagen Jetta SE, 2010 model in early summer 2010. Sold it in 2021. It was not that bad of a car. Had a $800 oil leak repair in 2020 that I had to fix but that was the only repair; it was the oil filter housing that cracked. I did not have any other repairs owning it for 11 years. It had 160,000 miles when I sold it.

Sometimes you get lucky? Not saying people can't have a good experience with a VW. My anecdotal evidence from quite a few friends is generally negative for VW. I have a huge Nissan Armada with 210k miles currently. Besides normal maintenance we've only have to replace the starter and that was because of a shit install on a remote starter that f'd it up. Suspension could use some work since we tow frequently with it. Most my VW friends had multiple issues that ended up costing $2-5k.

Mind you this is coming from a guy that grew up and was driving in the late 90's. Jettas and the like were super popular. It was probably 5-10% of what was parked on the lot in high school. Maybe quality has gotten better, but I don't know a single person right now that owns one. That seems pretty telling.
7   Tenpoundbass   2022 May 13, 5:27am  

Look! All's I know, is they had a great bottle opener built into their seat belts.
8   stfu   2022 May 13, 5:42am  

I didn't see many bugs domestically but while traveling in Mexico during the early 90's they were everywhere - literally represented 20% of the cars on the road (anecdotal).

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