Home » Why I Love The VW Beetle – A Rebuttal

Why I Love The VW Beetle – A Rebuttal

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I love Beetles. I always have. I’ve mostly just accepted this as a sort of natural law, like how things tend to fall downward or how there are 93 penises on the Bayeux Tapestry. But then I found that our very own gothy British designer Adrian had penned a poison letter announcing his revulsion at the humble little car, liberally seasoned with his usual vitriol, fresh from the bottle. This, of course, shocked me, in the same way that finding one more penis in the Bayeux Tapestry would. I realized that while everyone here at the Autopian is allowed their own automotive opinions, no matter how blighted or misguided, I cannot just let Adrian’s anti-Beetle missive go unanswered. So I’m writing this defense of the Beetle because these cars mean so much to me, and, more importantly, I think the Beetle has more than earned such a defense.

If I’m honest, though, the Beetle doesn’t need me to defend it. It’s the most-produced single car model ever made, with 21.5 million examples built between an absurdly long production run lasting from 1938 to 2003. The Beetle was built in Germany and Brazil and Mexico and Australia and South Africa and Nigeria and Ireland and some other places I’m probably forgetting. The Beetle put people into cars in places and circumstances that no other car would have been able to accommodate, and in the process became arguably the world’s most readily-identifiable car ever. Adrian is free to dislike the Beetle, but the truth is the Beetle doesn’t mind, because the Beetle has too many ardent fans in too many places, and all those people that love this noisy little insect aren’t going to be swayed by someone grousing on the internet, even when that grousing is as well-written as Adrian’s is.

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The Beetle isn’t daunted by criticisms. It’s heard most of these complaints for decades, and most of them aren’t really wrong, when it comes down to it. The Beetle is a strange little car, noisy and slow and primitive, milking a design from the age of Zeppelins well into the age of the Internet. But none of those things matter, even the slightest. The Beetle’s flaws and its charms blur together into a beautiful haze, every failing just adding to the considerable character of the car. There really is no more secure car than the Beetle, and I don’t mean that in the safety sense, because, by modern standards, an old air-cooled Beetle is definitely not safe. I mean that in the sense of being the opposite of something that is insecure, because the Beetle has nothing to prove. It has been an underdog from day one, and triumphed, in its own quiet and noisy way, ever since.

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Image: Volkswagen

The Beetle probably shouldn’t be as much of a triumph as it was, given its origins. Really, it couldn’t have a worse origin story, being summoned into being by one of history’s worst monsters, Adolf Hitler. Hitler didn’t design the Beetle or anything like that, but he demanded a car for the people, arguably one of the only non-terrible ideas he had, and then Ferdinand Porsche consolidated all of the various ideas being played with around Europe at that time of a new kind of small car, one with a rear engine and a streamlined shape, and eventually the KdF-Wagen (Strength-through-Joy car) was born.

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Illustration: Volkswagen
Photo: WIkimedia Commons

The KdF wouldn’t be built for civilian use during the war; instead the Beetle would be adapted to wartime duty, where the first hints of this machine’s incredible versatility would be revealed, as it formed the basis of Germany’s wartime light cars like the Kübelwagen and the amphibious Schwimmwagen.

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As a Jew who loves Beetles, you might think the origins of this car would dissuade me from wanting to have anything to do with them, but I think the contrary is true. Think about it: what would piss off Hitler’s ghost more than knowing that Jews like me are out there driving and enjoying his precious KdF-wagens? He’d be livid, soaking his jodhpurs in rage-urine and shrieking NEIN NEIN NEIN NEIN while I buzz past him in my yellow Beetle on the way to go to town on some whitefish salad on a bialy, flipping that dead loser the bird as I go by.

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Photos: Jason Torchinsky

The Beetle earned every bit of its success. The reason foreign cars never quite made it in America prior to the Beetle was because, frankly, they weren’t up to the challenge. Driving in America is a very different prospect than driving in Europe. The distances demanded by America would put you into one of several oceans should you attempt a similar drive in Europe. Most European cars of the ’50s weren’t robust enough to go on 12-hour highway-speed road trips. But the Beetle was specifically designed with an under-stressed engine with a short throw and low piston speed; its top speed wasn’t terribly high, but it was the same as its cruising speed, which meant it could haul down long American highways at decent highway speeds all day long, and for a tiny cheap car from the Old Country, this was an achievement.

Plus, when Volkswagen came to America, they had the foresight to set up an incredibly robust dealer network, and stocked those dealers with enough parts to build them, not just repair them. The car was designed to be easy to service from the get-go, and it was.

Engines dropped out of the bottom of the car after taking out four bolts, and some hoses and wires. Fenders could be replaced with 10 bolts. Bumpers were mounted far from the body to take damage before the body did, and were almost be treated as consumables, cheap and easy to replace. This was a car that was forgiving of the human condition and all the unpredictability of the world, and worked with you when things got rough, reacting well to whatever scrambling you could do to keep it going.

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The Beetle was the original anti-status car. It was truly classless, meaning that it transcended social strata, being something that your broke friend could drive or a movie star like Paul Newman.

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It didn’t change its sorta Art Deco-inspired design that was finalized before America even entered WWII, because why should it? The design worked. Let the Big Three radically redesign their chrome-slathered land barges every year. Does it make those cars better to own or use? Not really. The Beetle was incrementally improved constantly, and never changed for the sake of change. That’s why it became a sort of unofficial universal unit of measurement – it was a constant through time and space, seen and understood by people all over the world.

The Beetle is often thought of as a slow car, but that’s not entirely a fair assessment. In the right contexts, the Beetle proved to be a formidable racer. It was used for rally racing, drag racing, and, when adapted to use some genuinely bonkers rocket engines from Turbonique, could be astoundingly fast:

But where the Beetle really shone in competition was off-road. This humble little everyday commuter car, a car designed to be cheap, basic transportation for people, somehow managed to also be an incredibly capable off-road racer, tackling some of the hardest races in the world like the Baja 1000. There’s still a whole class of off-road racing, Class 11, that is basically stock Beetles, and it’s still going today, decades after Beetles have been common on the roads.

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What other economy car can claim something like this? Whole categories of racing based on them? That doesn’t happen. Except for the Beetle. I got to drive a Class 11 car once, and it was an absolute thrill:

And, of course, when it comes to competition chops, let’s not forget that without the Beetle, there would be no Porsche 356, which was essentially an improved Beetle, and then no Porsche 911, and no Porsche as we know it at all, ever.

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The Beetle’s ubiquity and unique chassis design that allowed the entire body to be easily removed also birthed the whole kit car industry, and most famously in that category (and fitting in with the discussion of the Beetle’s off-road racing successes) gave the world the Meyers Manx (and all its copycats).

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Image: PopSci

How many other cars have birthed entirely new subsets of the automotive industry? Kit cars were not even remotely as accessible or popular until easy-to-find, adapt, maintain, drive, and register Beetles gave up their chassis to become dune buggies or MG TD look-alikes or crazy wedge-shaped sports cars or sleek little vans or whatever.

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Oh! And I just remembered something else! The damn things floated! Without any modifications, Beetles were built so well and their bodies were so air-tight that you could drive them right into a lake or whatever and the car would float, at least for a while. VW even touted this in their ads:

With a little modification, you could get it to float indefinitely, and in some really difficult circumstances, like the open ocean:

Again, what other car, regardless of price or status or anything, could do that?

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The Volkswagen Beetle really wasn’t like any other mass-produced car before it, and, when I was growing up, I could tell the Beetle was different, and that absolutely appealed to me. There were all the other cars around me, and then there were Beetles. The Beetles looked different, sounded different, smelled different, and, as I knew from riding around in my dad’s red ’68, felt different to ride in. And I loved that.

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Image: Jason Torchinsky

Beetles were my gateway drug into interesting cars; it was because the Beetle did everything so differently that I started to become more and more interested in cars in general and soon would devour every book or magazine or placemat that could tell me anything about a car I didn’t know about before. The Beetle is fascinating because for all of its success, it didn’t really set a template for what was to come, like cars like the transverse-engined FWD Mini did. The Beetle was a strange survivor of long-gone way of thinking, a refugee from a future that never happened, a future of rear-engined streamlined cars and airships and skyscrapers connected with skyways and all sorts of other utopian visions of the 1930s.

The Beetle was the one bit of those daydreams that made the jump into reality, and once here, it flourished, even though it was mostly alone. Still, the world embraced this charming, friendly little machine, and gave it a home on its roads and in its culture.

Screenshot: YouTube/Disney

And we can’t ignore the Beetle’s cultural impact; the whole reason Disney cast a Volkswagen as a sentient race car in The Love Bug was because of all the cars that were being considered, which were parked in a Disney parking lot, the Beetle was the only one that people felt the urge to pet, like they would an animal. There is something about the Beetle’s design that is disarming and appealing, a plucky sort of eagerness that tugs at something deep inside us, making us feel warmth and affection for this collection of bent sheet metal, rubber, and glass.

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Screenshot: YouTube

Has any other car appeared on more kid’s clothes or sheets or as toys than the Beetle? I don’t think so. Is there any other car as instantly recognizable as the Beetle? Perhaps the original Jeep, but that’s about it, really. The Beetle transcends the automotive world, and is part of the overall human world, familiar to people who otherwise couldn’t tell a Corvette from a Chevette.

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Image: VW

I’m terribly fond of Adrian and all his earnest British crankiness, but he is woefully misguided here. The Volkswagen Beetle is one of the truly great cars of the world, ever, an astoundingly flexible and usable transportation tool for so very many people, in so many places. A tool that came from the worst possible origins and proved itself to be a rugged and willing partner in life, a strangely charming and appealing artifact, one of those works of human hands that transcends everything it was originally intended to be, becoming a marvel of ingenuity and an object of affection.

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Photo: William Torchinsky

I’ll always love the Volkswagen Beetle, openly and unashamedly, fully aware of all its many flaws and still smitten, hopelessly and happily.

 

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Andrew Bugenis
Andrew Bugenis
2 months ago

I do not have strong feelings about the Beetle.

(I’ve come around on the New Beetle.)

JDE
JDE
2 months ago

The air cooled units were never really appealing, but I do understand the simplicity drawing some in. I do kind of dig the buggys and definitely like the more stylish Karman Ghia’s, even though they are basically squished beetles. I do kind of wish the “New” beetle had used a Porsche RWD 4 cylinder, but I also acknowledge that at the time and probably still today, RWD in a Small Car Daily driver is not the norm and would put the thing in a niche class for sales.

Farty McSprinkles
Farty McSprinkles
2 months ago

I don’t think the beetle is a particularly good car. I could fill a TLDR paragraph with all the problems I have with the way they are designed and things that I don’t think make sense. However, I absolutely love them. Cars are not logical. I fell in love with them before I could even drive, watching all the Herbie movies on VHS. I promptly purchased one in high school and it is was one of the most unreliable vehicles I have ever owned and also one of my favorites. One day I will have another one, curse it every time it is cold outside, and smile every time I look at it.

The Spirit of Jalopnik Past
The Spirit of Jalopnik Past
2 months ago

Id rather have any Beetle over any 911

but if I did have a 911, it would be yellow with a fake flower on the dash

Mr E
Mr E
2 months ago

You’re both right.

The Beetle is simultaneously awesome and shitty*. Perhaps the only car in the history of cars that can claim that. Maybe.

*I had a roommate in college that had one – it spent most of its life sitting in a parking space, broken. Looked cool, though.

Joe Average
Joe Average
2 months ago
Reply to  Mr E

I drove one daily for years. I still have the one I bought in the early 90s. The Beetle I sold to buy my current Beetle lasted two weeks before it broke down and the owner started dragging my rep through the mud. I told him when he bought the car that if the starter got hot, it would need a tap from a hammer to get started again. He continued to drag my name through the mud. I demanded he meet me at the sleeping Beetle in the parking lot, tapped on the starter and almost two month after last being driven, it fired right up. He finally stopped running his mouth.

I would have always been happy to help him along on his Beetle adventure but he wanted to complain rather than learn.

Beetles are very rewarding to maintain. They’ll run despite alot of neglect but with a little experience and understanding by its mechanic, they will absolutely purr.

I really love those little aircooled engines. Completely obsolete in 2025 of course but I would never want an aircooled VW without an aircooled engine. My Westfalia is also aircooled but – Corvair aircooled. The 70s+ buses should have never been shipped with a 60HP four cylinder. Just isn’t enough considering their size and bulk. They needed a ~90HP six.

Last edited 2 months ago by Joe Average
Justin Thiel
Justin Thiel
2 months ago

i am 6’5″ and just loved that my little 71 Super was not just able to hold me, but me and wife and kid. We fit comfortably. Sure it was slow and unsafe, but for a Sunday cruise or a quick zip to movies or a light grocery run there was nothing better. I moved the beetle on to someone better equipped to care for her.

The beetle is the car that I learned that we truly never own cars, we are just their keepers until another person needs it. That car was a 71.. i had to have been at least its 10th keeper, and I like to think I left it a little nicer than I found it.

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
2 months ago

Great article, Torch! I do appreciate the beetle’s chassis and body design, very much so! However… the drivetrain. Well, you said they had a certain ‘smell’, and that is undoubtedly the scent of oil leaking from one of the 1,257 mating surfaces/leak points down onto the exhaust. After restoring my 77 911 engine, I’m impressed with the simplicity of the design in terms of tooling and reusing parts, but at the same time, it’s just so complicated compared to a watercooled engine.

Example:

Watercooled:Inline 4 cylinder. You have a block with the cylinders already in it, an oil pan gasket, a single head gasket, and a single valve cover gasket. Sure, there might be some other ones, but basically it’s 3 main gaskets and leak points.

Aircooled: Opposed 4 cylinder. The block is now a ‘case’ split into two parts that sandwich around the crank. So there’s 1 gasket. You still have an oil pan gasket, so there’s 2. Then you have 4 gaskets on each cylinder against the case, and another 4 gaskets on each head. Then you have valve cover gaskets.

It’s just so frigging complex, with so many potential failures that it’s hard to keep them ‘dry’ underneath. And then you have the labor costs associated with rebuilding them. This is part of the reason having a 911 engine rebuilt is over $20,000 today, which is ridiculous, because you’re not even getting 300hp. Likely not even 250hp, for twenty thousand dollars!

I love everything the OG beetle has to offer, but I think a watercooled powerplant would have been an improvement.

Aircooled engines are stupid.

  • An aircooled 911 owner
Hondaimpbmw 12
Hondaimpbmw 12
2 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

Well, the VW was famously practical for use in the Antarctic. No coolant to freeze. I be surprised if it didn’t have the gasoline fired heater, given that the “hot” air provided stick was weaker than the gentle zephyrs of a “World” dryer at a rest stop bathroom.

Joe Average
Joe Average
2 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

I love those little oil leakers. I admire the Porsche flat six but that’ll never be in my budget. So it’s Corvair flat-sixes and VW flat fours.

Glad I don’t daily an aircooled engine though. Glad for my spare time, glad for the environment, glad for our safety.

Last edited 2 months ago by Joe Average
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
2 months ago

I agree w/ everything and also love the Beetle…slugbug! It’s SO unbelievably iconic in every way and so fascinating how many were made over such a long time. I like how it shows that sometimes it’s OK to not change designs constantly when it just works. It’s SUCH a cute lovable car kinda like Kei cars. I also love how sleek it is- the body just flows. I’ve never had a Beetle (have had an 84 Jetta and 83 Rabbit GTI and those were a blast to drive) but want to eventually get one as one of my cars, not just so I can say I’ve owned a Beetle; but also for all the great things about them as mentioned. They just look like so much fun to drive…and another thing- they are just such HAPPY cars!

Griznant
Griznant
2 months ago

I have swayed back and forth across many brands and styles of cars over my car ownership lifetime. I like many of them, maybe even love a little of them for various reasons, but one thing that has stood the test of time is my true “love” for the VW Beetle. I migrated to Porsches, have had a wide assortment of other sports cars, SUVs, trucks, V8 American cars, blah blah blah, but when I see a Bug, I *love* that car. No other car gives me as much joy to drive, or even look at, like a VW Beetle. If I could only have one car for the rest of my life, that would be it. No question.

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
2 months ago

I have to side with you on this. Adrian is free to dislike whatever he wants, but the fact that everyone has a Beetle story is what makes them great above all else. The Beetle sort of exists above anyone’s personal opinions.

My Beetle story involves my dad, his beige ’69 Beetle, the Hi-Lite 30 Drive-In Theater in Montgomery, Illinois, and Star Wars. The first one. Watching X-Wing and TIE fighters zoom across a big screen through the Beetle’s windshield while listening to the sound effects coming out of that heavy cast-aluminum speaker hung on the window is a memory that’s still sharp in my mind today. My true first automotive love was the car Dad replaced the Beetle with a year and a half later, a brand-new ’79 Fiat 128, but I’ll always associate Beetles with Dad, and sci-fi movies.

Back in college I attempted Beetle ownership with an orange ’73 Super Beetle, and discovered I like the idea of the Beetle far more than the actual experience of owning or driving one. But hey, live and learn.

Joe Average
Joe Average
2 months ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

I think a Beetle is pretty easy to live with if a person buys and read John Muir’s “How to Keep Your VW Alive for the Compleat Idiot” for the layman’s explanations and the Bentley Publisher’s VW Service manual for the actual data and diagrams. They function as a team to train the shade tree mechanic.

Rust was the long term ownership problem of a Beetle inevitably. No galvanized panels. Just paint and paint fails eventually.

I was excited about the possibility of owning an XBus a few years ago. Alas, the company never reached production. I’d love a doublecab sunroof even with the performance restrictions the company described. ~60 mph top speed. I’d only use it locally anyhow.

Adrian Clarke
Editor
Adrian Clarke
2 months ago

Jason I love you dearly and you are my brother, but don’t ever, ever take me out for whitefish salad. That sounds disgusting.

Adrian Clarke
Editor
Adrian Clarke
2 months ago

Do they take the little heads off them? because I really don’t enjoy my dinner staring at me.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
2 months ago

It’s ambiguous beginnings aside, and after the war Germany completely disavowed the previous regime(unlike other axis powers), I really like seeing these on the road, and the newer models inspired by them.

I will say the originals are a death trap, and especially now with the EV conversions and people putting the batteries under the back seat and frunk like no, that’s terrible, giving it more power to go faster and batteries in the cabin to increase risk of death in a crash is a bad combination.

I really wish VW would get their heads out of their butts and embrace them again. The CEO that cancelled the new one and had them create a send off video was an idiot, and now we have a $60k bus with less range than my 8 year old Bolt EV. An ID.3 based one with proper frunk and good styling for around $35k would sell great.

Joe Average
Joe Average
2 months ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

Dangerous in similar ways to a motorcycle. If you can feel safe on a motorcycle, then a Beetle isn’t a big stretch.

I really like the simplicity of the Tello truck. Don’t want one but I like the idea. It reminds me of the aircooled VWs but with electric drive. Also the Slate EV truck. Those excite me as much as any fancy car being sold.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
2 months ago
Reply to  Joe Average

I feel like almost worse than a Motorcycle with proper gear, there’s not really crumple zones, more like crushing people zones.

PajeroPilot
PajeroPilot
2 months ago

Wow. What an amazing love letter to a truly incredible machine. Adrian’s rant was side splitting funny and made my morning, but after reading this, it’s hard to disagree with Jason.

I think I’m from one of the last generations for whom Beetles were relatively common on the roads still (at least in Australia) and growing up everyone still knew someone with a Beetle and everyone had a Beetle story. I miss the “dak-dak-dak” sound of the silly, smokey little things. Maybe because of the woman who owned one…

More robust debates like this please! Adrian, please do a scathing rant on the XJ Cherokee next!

Adrian Clarke
Editor
Adrian Clarke
2 months ago
Reply to  PajeroPilot

Do you want Evil David to fire me? Because that’s how you get Evil David to fire me.

Flyingstitch
Flyingstitch
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

I refuse to believe there’s an Evil David. You’re just afraid of all the other XJ fans. (I’m neutral here, definitely not a Jeep cultist.)

Dingus
Dingus
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

I would joyfully read it. I hate Jeeps. All of them. All bad things start find their origins with a Jeep.

PajeroPilot
PajeroPilot
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Evil? Perhaps sometimes incapable of rational thought, when seduced by a rusting Willy’s or a seized AMC 4.0, but surely not evil.

Data
Data
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

On Earth 317, Evil David plots his overthrow of the multiverse; but first he has to get his ZJ running.

AMC Addict
AMC Addict
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Former Beetle owner, current CJ-5 owner, I should submit the counter-counter point that both of you are wrong…

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
2 months ago

Replace the word “Beetle” with “Mini” or “2CV” and apart from the origin story it would work just as well.

Minis won rallies and touring car races. 2CVs have their own race series, including 24hour circuit races. Would the Italian Job have been as popular a film without the mini?

I hate Beetles. I dislike Minis. I love 2CVs despite them being probably worse cars than either of the other two.

I don’t think anyones’ feelings about any car are rational, but I have enjoyed both the articles trying to explain the contrasting opinions.

Joe Average
Joe Average
2 months ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

I’ve driven 2CVs many times and love them the same ways the Beetle is wonderful. The Mini is fun but I’ve never been really drawn to them. I did own an Autobianchi A112E – about an 1981 or so. That was a fun car. More fun than my friend’s Innocenti (rebodied Mini).

Crank Shaft
Crank Shaft
2 months ago

Great piece JT.

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
2 months ago

How many people remember closing both doors on a Beetle at once and having your ears pop? You have to admire that.

Joe Average
Joe Average
2 months ago
Reply to  Dodsworth

Yes but that happened b/c of VW’s poor design. A car body is supposed to vent pressure like that. The weatherstripping design was wrong.

ClutchAbuse
ClutchAbuse
2 months ago

Jason, this may be the best written piece you’ve done on this site yet.

AircooleDrew
AircooleDrew
2 months ago

The VW Beetle will always hold a special place in my heart. It was a lifelong dream to restore my 1968 Beetle with my dad, and that project brought us closer in ways we’d never experienced before. Late nights in the garage, sorting through parts, solving problems together—it wasn’t just about the car, it was about reconnecting. Watching Herbie the Love Bug as a kid is what first sparked my obsession with cars, and the Beetle has been at the center of it all ever since. This little car means the world to me.

Adrian is free to dislike it, and that is totally fine and valid! However, I owe a hell of a lot to this little insect. My daughter even got her own Bug for her birthday this year.

https://www.thesamba.com/vw/gallery/pix/2562007.jpg

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
2 months ago

“As a Jew who loves Beetles, you might think the origins of this car would dissuade me from wanting to have anything to do with them, but I think the contrary is true. Think about it: what would piss off Hitler’s ghost more than knowing that Jews like me are out there driving and enjoying his precious KdF-wagens?”
Ha, yeah. The actual origins of the Beetle do pre-date Hitler co-opting the work of various people such as Josef Ganz (himself a Jew), Hans Ledwinka, and Ferdinand Porsche among others, so Hitler’s misappropriation was actually more like a detour along the way for the Beetle, but it’s indeed gratifying and mighty satisfying to ponder the significance of people who don’t fit the Aryan ideal driving KdF-wagens.
While I don’t currently have a Beetle (I did teach myself to drive a stick on my family’s Super Beetle when I was growing up & I hope to acquire a Beetle someday) I do have a VW bus so there’s that; I was born deaf so obviously I sure as heck don’t fit the Aryan ideal and I appreciate the significance of myself driving a Beetle.
Around 1980 I met a grad student who was doing research into the history of deaf communities around Europe; when he went to Germany he found nobody who had been born deaf (or became deaf in early childhood) over the age of 35. He also had enormous difficulty in finding historical records about deaf Germans before 1945, despite the stereotypical German penchant for record-keeping and documentation, and he also found cemeteries and graveyards to be disconcertingly absent of gravestones for known deaf Germans. So, yeah, when I do acquire a Beetle (& resuscitate my long-idle bus) I’m going to embrace the heck out of me driving a KdF-wagen, ha, even though I know fully well how the Beetle was inevitably going to happen, regardless of Hitler’s ostensible involvement, thanks to all the people who were already passionately working on their dreams for a people’s car.

Lars Washburn
Lars Washburn
2 months ago

Not going to debate the validity of arguments for or against. only here to comment on how transcendently good Jason’s writing is in this article. My best read of the day, week…

Last edited 2 months ago by Lars Washburn
Adrian Clarke
Editor
Adrian Clarke
2 months ago
Reply to  Lars Washburn

ON THE LIST YOU GO.

General_Idiocy27
General_Idiocy27
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Yes. Onto The Autopians official list of Awesome People!

Last edited 2 months ago by General_Idiocy27
Adrian Clarke
Editor
Adrian Clarke
2 months ago

THAT IS VERY MUCH NOT WHAT THE LIST IS

General_Idiocy27
General_Idiocy27
2 months ago
Reply to  Adrian Clarke

Whatever you want to tell yourself Adrian.

Adrian Clarke
Editor
Adrian Clarke
2 months ago

I CREATED THE LIST I KNOW WHAT IT IS

Comet_65cali
Comet_65cali
2 months ago

Was going to say, no love to the Love Bug would have been the biggest sin.

Cerberus
Cerberus
2 months ago

Most of those arguments for its greatness are merely consequence of its cheapness and ubiquity. The Model T was also used for quite a lot of things for quite a while (even just the parts—my grandfather was an ice man, and the saw they used to cut ice sheets from a pond was powered by an old Model T engine) and even still are to some extent. It’s great that the Beetle allowed a kit car industry to flourish, but it also allowed a kit car industry to flourish. Again, if any other car were so common and cheap, it may have served to give rise to a similar industry, though perhaps with a drivetrain better than that of a discount lawnmower (I will concede that the more platform nature of the construction was better than the typical BoF of the time, assuming a fictional comparable volume and priced alternate as a more conventional vehicle, which arguably wouldn’t have succeeded as well for not being emblematically anti-establishment, since much of the Beetle’s success is down to politics of the time, but that’s a different discussion). Snark aside, the problem I guess is one of perception: was it better for kit cars to exist on the platform of a slow POS or to not exist at all? I’m on the fence. On one hand, there were some pretty fun designs (and plenty of abominations) that got built that I don’t have to drive or own and are fun to see (or were—there’s a Bradley 1 near me incongruously mostly hidden in overgrowth on an uppity front lawn that is possibly the only Beetle-based kit that isn’t a dune buggy type thing that I’ve seen in quite a lot of years). On the other hand, those kits were on Beetles, so they had nothing underneath but disappointment and a terrible engine note. As for the Porsche connection, I think a big reason I have never found Porsches appealing is the shared history and similar design of their more iconic models (and everything they make now that has the look based on the 911 no matter how bloated or misshapen it ends up due to a completely different drivetrain and purpose), so it wouldn’t matter to me if the overpriced Beetles never existed. Besides, Tatra did it better.

Hondaimpbmw 12
Hondaimpbmw 12
2 months ago
Reply to  Cerberus

Thinking about kit cars, the cheap and cheerful British Austin 7 was the starting point for Colin Chapman’s Lotus 7. I’m sure more than a few Brits made something more out of an old 7 in their sheds.

One More Last Chance
One More Last Chance
2 months ago

My dad worked for Bosch when I was growing up and his company car was a VW Beetle. He actually went through a couple of them as well as a Fox and a Rabbit. Shortly after I got my license, he got a new job and his company car was a Toyota Camry. The difference was astounding. The Camry was quiet and quick. It had 5 gears, the defroster worked, and it didn’t rattle. It’s not that I dislike the Beetle, it was just inferior. My brother got a Beetle and I got a Honda Accord CVCC. If he would have made it Baja Bug or added a dune buggy kit it would have been cool, but my car was so much better.

Harvey Park Avenue
Harvey Park Avenue
2 months ago

Is that little Paul Simon Torchinsky on the hood? Somehow he looked older 45 years ago than he does now.

Scootershapedmotorcycle
Scootershapedmotorcycle
2 months ago

My grandfather worked for Ferdinand Porsche at Austro-Daimler before the depression, and he helped my Opa get a job in Stuttgart during the depression after Austro-Daimler failed. Parts of this car are my Opa’s creation, my dad having copies of design documents his dad kept, and there are photos of my dad and a young Ferry Porsche blah blah blah. Point being, this car is not 1938, it is partially 1931. And what an ancient yet awesome vehicle. That’s all i have to say. I wish my dad would talk more about what he knows about his dad during that time period, but sadly no. I keep trying.

Rusty S Trusty
Rusty S Trusty
2 months ago

When I clicked on a Beetle article this morning I really didn’t expect to see a story about it’s design process come straight from the immediate family of a person who was directly involved almost 100 years ago and actually worked alongside Ferdinand Porsche himself. Very cool.

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