Type 2, T1 Mini-Bus The Volkswagen Type 2 was the second automotive line introduced by German automobile manufacturer Volkswagen. ... This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
The Eurovan (US), or Transporter (UK & Ireland) was the first front-engined van of German automobile manufacturer Volkswagen and is the successor of the famous classic VW Type 2 van. ...
Volkswagen Eurovan T5 Multivan Two identical brand-new 2004 VW Multivans. ... Volkswagen Eurovan T5 Multivan Two identical brand-new 2004 VW Multivans. ... The Eurovan (US), or Transporter (UK & Ireland) was the first front-engined van of German automobile manufacturer Volkswagen and is the successor of the famous classic VW Type 2 van. ...
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The 1997 VolkswagenCaravelle is fitted with a new 2.5 litre 85 kW SIMOS engine, matched to either a five speed manual gearbox or the latest four speed Dynamic Shift Program automatic gearbox with 'fuzzy logic' computer control.
The Caravelle not only moves things in it: With a braked trailer load of two tonnes or an unbraked trailer load limit of 700 kg, matched to powerful all disc brakes, the stability of fully independent suspension and a shape that guides the air flow over a trailer, the Caravelle is an ideal tow vehicle.
The VolkswagenCaravelle uses - with the new 'Plus' suspension - double wishbones, shock absorbers and longitudinally located torsion bars at the front, which are mounted on the upper wishbones.
Volkswagen say that Ganz wasn't the only one to have such a design and that the Käfer was not based on his.
Following the Volkswagen Group's acquisition of Audi in 1964, VW were able to use newly gained engineering expertise to develop a modern front wheel drive car with a water-cooled engine, and thus the Passat and Golf (introduced 1976) were the first of a new generation of Volkwagens.
Rather than redesign the vehicle, Volkswagen abandoned the project altogether and the last Things were sold in the United States in 1974.The myth that Things are amphibious vehicles probably comes from their resemblance to the Schwimmwagen, a vehicle tested by the German military during World War II.