Back on March 32, 2022, three people had a dream. A dream of making something great, of building a community of like-minded people to celebrate something they all loved, via the power of communication, art, science, and joy. I remember David, Beau, and I read something about that from a newspaper clipping we were using to wrap some chunks of LA river fish, but thought it sounded pretty hokey, so we decided to start a car website/community instead! This very community you’re a part of now! Yes, everyone, it’s March 32, and the Autopian is four years old!
Holy crap, four years! How did that happen? I remember on the day the site went live, the Association for Dressings and Sauces sent us a vitriolic message by courier suggesting we’d be gone within a week, and to them that was six days too late. The Society of Actuaries sent a dozen black roses with a note that called us “sub-morons.” The Industrial Fasteners Institute sent a series of angry emails, each with a Photoshopped picture of David and myself doing dangerous, stupid things, like eating mouthfuls of industrial brad nails. There seemed to be a lot of forces in confederation against us, but that only fueled our resolve to make the Autopian happen.
So here we are, four years into this grand experiment, and I think it’s going better than ever. Our community is without question the best automotive-focused community of friendly car geeks anywhere on the public or private internet, and I’ll back that up with my tangelo-sized fists if I need to. We have interesting and fun stories going up every day, and we’re even technically an automobile manufacturer, at least in the eyes of the state of California, thanks to the scratch-built WWII Jeep project. And there’s so much more to come!

With all this in mind, let me introduce you to our fourth-year anniversary car, the Volkswagen Type 4! Last year we had the Saab Sonnet III, and before that, the Ford Mustang II, so I think the venerable Type 4 fits well into this group.
The Type 4 was VW’s attempt to drag the old 1930s-era Beetle formula of air-cooled rear engines into the modern world, and overall, they succeeded, I think. When the 411 was released in 1968, it was the first VW to use unibody construction, MacPherson strut front suspension, and an all-new aluminum flat-four air-cooled engine that would outlive the Type 4 itself, going on to power Microbuses and Vanagons and the VW-Porsche 914. It was also VW’s first production air-cooled engine to make 100 hp, at least in some versions!

The Type 4 was also VW’s first four-door car since the Kübelwagen, even if the wagon version was inexplicably still a two-door.
You can see the unibody difference when you slide under one. Especially if you can also slide under an earlier VW. Here, I’ll save your shirt from getting filthy by showing you the underside of a VW Type 3 Squareback (top, body-on-chassis) and a VW Type 4 Wagon (bottom, unibody):

See the difference? Look at all that modernity!

The Type 4 was an absolute packaging triumph; the MacPherson front suspension allowed for an absolutely cavernous front trunk, and there was still luggage area at the rear:

In wagon versions, of course, there was a ton of room at the rear, over the flat engine:

These were what VW considered a “premium” car, and while it was a pretty idiosyncratic take on “premium,” I always thought these were fascinating cars. The general public may have been fascinated, but not really enough to buy them, and the Type 4s are generally considered a sales flop.
Of course, we have to keep in mind what “sales flop” meant for a company the size of VW, which sold over 20 million Beetles. This “flop” still managed to sell about 368,000 cars. That’s about 100,000 more Type 4s than there were Acura Legends made, so that’s something.

The Type 4 is sort of the underdog of the air-cooled VW world, but I’m proud to have it as the Autopian’s fourth anniversary car. Just like us, it’s a mix of old, weird ideas clumsily melded with modern techniques! It’s strange and charming and flawed and wonderful, just like all of us!
Here’s to keeping on doing this for many more years! This is a weird time for, well, everything, but especially for the automotive journalismism world, with the encroaching AI slop and private equity numbnutzen buying up everything. But not us! We’re committed to serving you, our readers and members, with human-produced geeky and fun car content, as much as we can.
Want to join us? If you’re not a member and would like to become one, you can help us celebrate our fourth anniversary with a special discount! Just click this link to save 4.44% on a Cloth-teir membership, or go here and use the code 4tunate and pick out whichever membership level you want and get the fourth anniversary discount!
Top graphic image: Volkswagen









4tunate, indeed!
I’m very happy with the site and the community you crazy kids have managed to build with minimal adult supervision 😀
Happy Birthday y’all! It’s been a great 4 years, and I’m looking forward to the next 40!
You sons of bitches tricked me into paying for a membership to a car website!
I’m so livid that a strongly worded letter will accompany my renewal next fall.
Actually, that may be from my employer, due to productivity drop.
I’m down to only 21 Autopian tabs in my browser, so I’m being productive at something!
I’m in the website, I’m in the Discord, I’m in the combination website and Discord.
Thanks for 4 years of entertainment and enjoyment. I wouldn’t own 7 cars (6 that run and drive!) without the bad influences here and that I’ve met in the Discord.
Dear diary, today I learned what a tangelo is. Also, Happy Anniversary!
I just assumed his fists were mini Tony Angelos, throwing pizzas at all enemies.
Justifying my annual subscription in three words. 😀
May the type 4th be with you!
Wait, it’s March 32nd. I’m confused.
Congratulations! Followed y’all from the Old Site and never looked back!
CONGRATULATIONSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Happy March 32nd! I can’t believe it’s been 4 years already. Congratulations! I really, really hope next year you do the Lincoln Continental Mark V. That would be awesome
March 32nd? Is that the same as April Fuels Day?
Looking forward to your Renault 5 Turbo.
I’m hoping for the Mach 5.
Presented by Penn Gillette?
Haha. No, I’d prefer Pops Racer, not pop’s razor.
Well, that gives me a cinqing feeling.
This is a tough competition, but I imagine MX-5 Is Always The Answer.
Amazing! Happy anniversary everyone!
I’m not sure I’d say that about the taillight community. They seem pretty rowdy.
congrats on 4 years! you’ve outlasted many bumper-to-bumper warranties.
Congrats on four years! To celebrate, I just became a member. Thanks for running the best auto site in the world!
Congratulations on 4 years!
I forgot how much better these looked with the Euro-spec lights instead of sealed beams. A car I have long had a soft spot for. I’d love to have a wagon.
You guys have done good here. That I willingly send you money as a cheap Yankee SOB speaks volumes.
Those lights weren’t just Europe only, they were 1968 only. After the first year the home market cars went to quad round ones.
Shame, they look so much better. Kind of an odd thing to have for one year, tooling up for those must have cost a pretty penny, even if using standard headlights were certainly lots cheaper. I’d love to know the story there – doesn’t seem like VW would have needed to pinch marks quite that hard in those days.
Congrats and keep up the good work, especially including stories about odd-duck vehicles like the 2CV.
What a terrific website, and a terrific community. The morning dump is the only news article where I will read the comments.
This is the best place on the internet and I’m grateful for it.
Also, this might be the only 4 year interval at the end of which no one is screaming for change…
It’s always so weird to me to see the odd few comments that pine for the “old Autopian.” Like… This *is* the old Autopian. Do you mean back when it was just a couple of website gametes, waiting to tangle in the miracle of sexual website reproduction?
Bring back David up to his ears in some project, Jason pining over taillights, and Mercedes schooling us in school bus lore!
Wait…
TBF, the last school bus article came from Jason. Granted, it was also a Waymo article and he literally wrote the book on self driving cars, but still…
Congrats on your respective underbodies going from rippled to smooth. It happens to all of us!
I seem to get more rippled as I age, though in fairness I haven’t got out the mirror to look at my underbody.
Here’s to the next year of grumpy posts, taking editors to the mat over peccadilloes, weirdly sincere expressions of thanks and gratitude to the site and community, and lamenting the stranglehold an elite few hold over COTD.
Y’all are the best. I wear my shirts with absolute pride, and save them for special occasions (like when I know I’m going to leave the house, especially somewhere fancy like harbor freight), and am so grateful for this site and the people that make it what it is.
Good to know I’m not the only one who does this.
Clearly the reason the 411/412 as a “flop” is because VW didn’t bother building the notchback and cabriolet they developed.
Instead we got the practical but lumpy 3 door fastback.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Type_4
And they were expensive
That too – they were $3000 in 1971 when you could get a new larger Torino V8 for less.
In Germany, we call it the Nasenbär (coati).
Congrats! Man… those air cooled VWs were a piece of packaging genius.