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It feels like the
has been on the edge of death for eons;
we drove the Beetle Final Edition
last November, after all. But this summer the bell really does toll, and
celebrating right now on the roads of Italy. The carmaker entered two vintage Beetles into this year’s Mille Miglia, both of them reproductions of Beetles that competed in 1954 and 1956. They will be among the
entrants in the timed, 1,000-mile run from Brescia to Rome and back, many of which are superficially far more impressive than the Volkswagens. That side of the story hasn’t changed in 60 years.
Volkswagen reconstructed gentleman racer
Paul-Ernst Strähle’s 1948 Pretzel Beetle
that he raced in the 1954 Mille Miglia. This isn’t one of the
Pretzel Beetle prototypes we recently wrote about
, but one of the production
. Painted Reseda Green, the body comes from a 1951 Pretzel
, the running gear from a
356, the flat-four engine in back producing 58 horsepower just as it did in Strähle’s car. What the original coupe lacked in grunt it made up for in reliability, Strähle driving his creation to first place in the 1,300-cc class and third in the 1,500-cc class.
The second entry reproduces a 1956 Ovali Beetle. This is the third Mille Miglia for the Diamond Green bug, Volkswagen Classic having recreated it for outings in 2011 and 2012. The running gear again comes from a Porsche, this time a 74-hp flat-four.
This year will mark 81 total years of production for the Volkswagen Beetle, 63 for the original
maggiolino
– Italian for the cockchafer beetle, otherwise known as a May bug or doodlebug. With more than 21.5 million units of the original built on six continents — outdoing the
Model T by about seven million units — no car saw wider mass production on a single platform than the vintage Beetle. With another 22 years of production for the
, we can’t imagine this is the last we’ve heard of what truly became the people’s car.
from Autoblog http://bit.ly/2w2Nh66