VW Camper and Microbus
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About this ebook
Richard Copping
Richard Copping is Britain's most prolific author on matters Volkswagen, with well over twenty books written about Beetles, Transporters, the VW Golf and more. His deep-rooted love for the marque has encouraged him to amass a large collection of archive brochures, to travel the length and breadth of the country visiting many of the Volkswagen enthusiast events, to photograph all types of Volkswagen whenever the occasion arises and, above all, to write about the vehicles in a style that has come to be recognized as both authoritative and lively.
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A great overview of the VW Bus and all it's variants. Crisp, clean writing along with plenty of interesting ads and pictures make it an easy read!
Book preview
VW Camper and Microbus - Richard Copping
INTRODUCTION
Photography and artwork used in brochures dating from the 1960s concentrated on living with a Transporter. The model shown is a Microbus.
BACK in the late 1980s few would have given a second glance to a Volkswagen Transporter, either the archaic split-screen model produced between 1950 and 1967, or its less than dynamic larger-windowed successor, on sale from August 1967 until the summer of 1979. Underpowered and cumbersome, they were – like any other redundant model – ever depreciating assets heading for the scrapyard as the years took their toll.
But for some time now, these old Volkswagens have not only achieved a status as sought-after icons of a bygone age, but also, as a direct consequence of such appeal, have been appreciating in value, a phenomenon so rare in the world of motor manufacturing as to be genuinely noteworthy. A concurrent spin-off of this popularity is the proliferation of china mugs bearing an image of these vehicles, salt and pepper sets created in their likeness, and prints capturing their retro feel, to mention but three examples. Meanwhile, coastal resorts are frequented by surfboard-bedecked, brightly painted and decorated VW Buses, a throwback to the days of the hippy. Formerly quiet campsites are the scene of conventions of elderly Volkswagens and their air-cooled clatter. Enthusiast gatherings attract massive numbers of owners and admirers; shows are packed to capacity or even outgrow their original venues.
The truth behind the cult of the Volkswagen Transporter is twofold: the happy smiling faces of the old Buses capture all that endears the 1950s and 1960s to modern man, while the growing trend towards back-to-basics outdoor enjoyment is nowhere better embodied than in an elderly and unsophisticated Camper van.
Volkswagen launched its first Transporters with little thought of a name, the model designation of Type 2 (the Beetle was the Type 1) being deemed sufficient in the haste to enter production. Fortunately, the situation was partially remedied through terms such as the ‘Transporter’ in Europe and the ‘Bus’ in the United States. Passenger-carrying versions in North America became ‘VW Station Wagons’ although the European formality of ‘The Volkswagen Camper with Westfalia Deluxe Equipment’, often seen in print, was rarely heard. The American or Australian designation of ‘Campmobile’ might sound contrived, as could the equally artificial term ‘Vanagon’, but at least owners could confirm their vehicle’s origins through such names.
Although Volkswagen did not build its own Camper until late 2004, much earlier vehicles have long been attributed with the term – owners enjoying an outdoor life to the full.
Throughout most of this book the Transporter is referred to by that name, which has gathered official status as the years have passed. But when we come to the period of customisation, lowering, rat-looks and hippy buses, deeply immersed in the realms of enthusiasm, the first-generation Transporter becomes the ‘Splitty’, while its successor is widely known as the ‘Bay’ – both nicknames being derived from the vehicle’s windscreens.
Richard Copping, 2008
THE TRANSPORTER’S ORIGINS
THREE MEN played key parts in the story behind the creation of the Transporter. Perhaps surprisingly, the Beetle’s originator, Ferdinand Porsche, was not one of them. His role ended with the saloon and its military siblings, these latter being built to assist the Nazi war effort. Hitler had been repeatedly obstructed by German motor manufacturers in his pre-war goal of delivering Porsche’s ‘people’s car’ to the masses and was determined that a factory dedicated to its production would be built. In 1945 the British took control of this heavily bombed and ownerless factory, known now as Wolfsburg. Porsche had fled and it was left to a British major, Ivan Hirst, to run the works, producing vehicles for transport-starved military personnel.
Renowned for his ingenuity in the face of crippling shortages, when British Army forklifts were withdrawn from Wolfsburg for use elsewhere, Hirst created a flatbed vehicle using the Beetle’s chassis as its basis. A seat and primitive cab were positioned above the rear-mounted engine, and so the whole front end, amounting to some 75 per cent of the vehicle, could be allocated to easy load carrying. Named the ‘Plattenwagen’, this vehicle triggered the fertile imagination of the second player in the story of the Transporter’s birth.
Variously described as extrovert, ebullient or opportunist, Dutchman Ben Pon was determined to secure a franchise to sell Beetles in his home country. Legend has it that Pon, temporarily commissioned a colonel in the Dutch Army, bedecked