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9. Kübeltreffen auf Rabenstein 2010 |
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Schiffshebewerk Niederfinow 2010 |
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langersven (rubey sven) (2010-09-03 13:30:55) |
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Mark (Mark) (2010-08-28 16:17:11) |
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admin (Administrator) (2010-08-24 23:02:26) |
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vw181ralf (Ralf Gehring) (2010-08-22 17:41:42) |
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P181 (FF) (2010-08-06 15:25:08) |
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Kübel, Trecker, Safari, Pescaccia, Acapulco, Thing usw. |
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Geschrieben von FF
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Donnerstag, 21 September 2006 |
     
Nachfolgend eine interessante Zusammenstellung der Namen, die es für den VW 181 gibt und der Details, die die jeweilige Ausführung ausmachen:
Type 181
Official Volkswagen factory
designation
for all of the left hand drive and a few right hand drive
vehicles (the
Beetle being the type 1, the bus the type 2 etc.) It was
originally built
for the Bundeswehr (German Federal Army) and designated
Mehrzweckwagen
(multi-purpose vehicle). In German-influenced markets, it is
generally
known as "Kübel" or "Kübelwagen" after its ancestor
from WW-II,
the type 82.
La Pescaccia
Version für den italienischen Markt:

Thing
In 1973 and 1974 28,930 THINGs (14,197 and 14,733 resp.) were
built and
exported to the U.S. for sale by Volkswagen of America. 1973 and
1974 THINGs
came as a standard type 181 THING. Those few THINGS with 1975
registration
have all been proven to be left-over 1974 models sold by dealers
as 1975
models. All have VINs: 184XXX forever making them a 1974 THING.
The importing
of 1975 and later Type-181's was prohibited by the U.S.
government as they
could not meet crash testing standards for "passenger cars". The
1973 and
1974 were classified as "Multi-Purpose Vehicles" and were exempt
from those
tests. Beside that, VW couldn't sell them and wanted an excuse to
drop
the vehicle from its offerings anyway.
Differences from the Safari included full emissions equipment on
the engine,
the letter "X" (for export) following the chassis number and a
U.S. DOT
sticker on the left centre door post.
The first "Name" attached to these cars was to the Type-181 that
was being
built, or at least assembled, in Mexico, starting in late 1970.
For purposes
of registration, VW wanted all of these cars were to be called
"The Safari",
as this name had the same general meaning in all of the languages
of the
Americas. Unfortunately General Motors had been using the
"Safari" name
on Pontiac Station wagons as early as 1955 and thereby "owned"
the name
Safari in the U.S. market. Volkswagen of America therefore
elected to call
all of it's type 181 cars "The THING". The official name "The
THING" is
supported not only in all the VW literature, but in at least 42
states
DMV registrations. Only 4 states are known to register these cars
as "Type-181".
Those THINGs that were sold in Canada and a few other countries,
that were
VW of A THINGs, were trans-shipped after delivery in the U.S.,
much in
the same way that Type-3 notchbacks got into the U.S. from
Canada.
Acapulco
In 1974 the THING "Acapulco" model was available, a stock THING
with a
few minor trim changes. They had blue and white paint &
interior (look
behind the dash panels, this should be blue), running boards
(pans had
extra nuts welded on the edge), usually a surry top and either a
hardtop
or a soft top. In as most of the purchasers of Acapulco's left
the surry
top behind at the dealers, there was no shortage of tops and
frames in
the middle 70's.
The earliest photo of an Acapulco prototype dates from the Puebla
factory
in 1972, right after they started Type-181 Safari production. As
early
as 1973 the Surry top and the running boards were seen in VW of
America
advertisements with the note that the surry top was a "Future
Option".
Although the parts certainly existed in Mexico at that time, it
is unlikely
that there were 1973 Acapulco THINGS sold by VW of America. There
were
some Acapulco's built in Mexico in 1973 for the resort trade,
including
a few with a pink and white colour scheme.
Safari
The Safari was produced for Mexican domestic sales and was also
exported
to countries to the south of Mexico. The Mexican domestic engines
all had
low compression pistons installed for about a 6.8:1 compression
ratio that
would run on lower grade Premex gasolines.
Type 182, Trekker
Type 181 with right-hand drive produced in Germany for the United
Kingdom.
Small numbers of type 182s were produced by VW from about 1970
onwards,
either as demonstrators or to specific order (example: chassis
no. 181
2195 609 was shipped to Zambia in December 1970 - without any
heating!).
The type 182 was officially sold in Britain by VW dealers in
1974-75, under
the name "Trekker". Volkswagen U.K. first attempted to introduce
the type
182 into England as "The THING", but the dealers objected to the
name and
a "contest" was held to "Name the car".
Despite Press reports that 300 were being imported, current
records only
show surviving chassis no.'s. in the series 185 2086406 to -477,
i.e. less
than 100. Presumably plans were modified since VW overpriced it,
so it
didn't sell very well. These vehicles were made in Mexico (not
Germany),
generally to 1974 THING specification, but with European
rear-lights and
front flashers. In May 1997 the 181/182 Register listed 51 type
182s, 45
of which are 74/75 Trekkers and the rest being of various
ages/origins.
Other type 182s were built into the middle 1970's, primarily for
military
use in countries where right hand drive was standard (Morocco had
at least
20 units).
Visiting holiday-makers to Bali report that Indonesian vehicles
are also
182s.
Source: Ian David Harrison (e-mail of 97-05-02); Bob
Miller (e-mail
96-08-12, 98-05-24, digests of 8.28.96, 8.30.96, 12.15.96); Hanno
Spoelstra |
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