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THING FOR SALE
Are you looking for a VW THING for sale? Dou you want to buy or sell VW THING ? Then you are in the right place. We are a broker that can assist you in buying or selling your VW THING. Volkswagen 181 Volkswagen Type 181
- Manufacturer - Volkswagen - Parent company - Volkswagen Group - Also called - Kurierwagen, Trekker, Thing, Safari - Production - 1969 – 1980 for civilian use but only imported officially into the U.S in 1973 and 1974, through 1983 for Military use 90,883 built (70,519 in Germany, 20,364 in Mexico) [1] - Predecessor - Volkswagen Kübelwagen - Successor - Volkswagen Iltis - Class - Military vehicle, Compact SUV - Body style(s) - 4-door cabriolet - Layout - Rear engined - Engine(s) - 1.5 or 1.6L H4 - Transmission(s) - 4-speed manual - Wheelbase - 2,400 mm (94.5 in) - Length - 3,780 mm (148.8 in) - Width - 1,640 mm (64.6 in) - Height - 1,620 mm (63.8 in) - Curb weight - 910 kilograms (2,006 lb)
A
1974 "Acapulco" Thing
Although Volkswagen had been approached during the 1950s about building such a vehicle, and had subsequently passed on the proposition, the then-current management of the company saw the project as having some amount of potential as a consumer vehicle; Mexican customers were asking for something that could handle rural roads better than the Beetle, which was a large seller in Mexico at the time, and the popularity of VW-based dune buggies within the U.S. made executives think that a durable, fun, off-road-capable vehicle would become attractive to many buyers. VW could keep cost to a minimum and thus maximize profitability by using existing parts. Like the World War II era Type 82 Kübelwagen, the Type 181 used mechanical parts and a rear-engine platform derived from that of the Type I Beetle. The floorpans came from the Karmann Ghia, which itself was based on the Type I, and reduction gearing from the Volkswagen Transporter Bus was used through 1973 when platform upgrades eliminated that setup in favor of revised parts. Civilian sales began in Europe and Mexico during 1971, and in the U.S. in 1972, but the model was dropped from the American lineup for 1975 as it failed to meet stricter new safety standards. Notably the Type 181 was reclassified as a passenger vehicle, and thus subject to stricter safety standards, not as a light truck as is the case with the modern-day Chrysler PT Cruiser. The Windshield Intrusion Rule of the 1975 DOT standard called for a greater distance between the front seat occupants and the front window glass. This change was mandated after lighter cars made in reaction to the first fuel crisis caused front hoods to cleave passengers in two in moderate speed impacts. The Europa Jeep was a NATO dream, to have a vehicle where by each European NATO makers all combined to build a light duty patrol vehicle. The Volkswagen 181 was only supposed to fill in, until the time that the Europa Jeep was ready. From 1968 until 1979, over 50 thousand Type 181 were delivered to the NATO forces. By 1979 the Europa Jeep project had fallen apart completely and was abandoned, and the German government began supplementing their consumption of 181's with the new front-engined Type 183 Iltis, which featured four-wheel-drive based on the mechanical system from a VW Golf[citation needed]. Despite the German government's switch to the Type 183, European and Mexican sales of the civilian 181 continued through 1980, and several organizations, including NATO, continued to purchase military-spec units through 1983, finding their reliability and low purchase and maintenance costs attractive.
The '182' was the name given to the '181' in right hand drive form. 1973 was the first year sold in the US Market. Mexico began producing them after 1972.
Current
prices in the United States range from $3,000 for restorable units to
upwards of $15,000 for nicely restored examples. In early 2007 four 181
"Things" sold at the Barrett-Jackson auto auction for well over
$20,000 each, with one 1973 example selling for $42,560. |
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