We Need A Name For This Type Of VW Beetle: Cold Start

Cs Namethisbeetle 1
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I just got back from LA last night, and I was going through a few pictures from the huge Galpin Car Show, and this one caught my eye. It’s a Beetle convertible, I think a 1967, and while there were many, many other old air-cooled Volkswagens, many more interesting, this one caught my attention because I realized it’s outfitted in a way that I feel like I’ve seen before, but I’m not quite sure what to call it. It’s not a Baja Bug, but it shares some traits, it’s not quite a full rally Beetle, it’s not exactly prepped to race – what is going on here, exactly?

Cs Namethisbeetle 2

There’s some interesting details and traits here: the fenders are a bit cut down – not to the degree a dedicated off-road Beetle would be, but a bit. The spare tire is mounted on that carrier at the rear – an odd choice considering the already significant rear weight bias – there’s wider rear wheels, no running boards, a semaphore slot (unoccupied, and this car is way too late for semaphores, so not sure what’s going on there), a towing arm setup up front, and all on a convertible.

Strangely, it reminds me a bit of a noted and quite famous grouch’s Beetle:

Cs Grouchcar

I mean, yes, the one I saw is vastly better cared for and likely free of worms, but there’s a bit of an aesthetic parallel.

The look is like a rugged-and-ready kind of thing, but less specific than the other popular ruggedized VW looks.

What should we call this, if this look/subculture lacks a name? Utility Beetle? Rugged Bug? Survival Beetle?

I’m open to ideas!

 

— J

55 thoughts on “We Need A Name For This Type Of VW Beetle: Cold Start

  1. I’d call it by a name that reflects the mix of off-roaders and on-roader that’s seen these days in the raised station wagons (the ones that admit they’re wagons, not all the PSuedo-UVs trying to deny it) like the Volvo Cross-Country, the Audi Allroad, the VW Alltrack and the Mercedes All-Terrain. Ideally it would give a nod to the first of the current batch, the Subaru Outback (no need to take flight with the AMC Eagle.) The Beetle/Outback would become the BeatBack. Or the BackBeat. A convertible BeatBack would become the BeatDown, while a BackBeat with a removable hardtop would be the Beat… well, you see where this is going.

  2. What a mix: 50ies semaphore body sides, 60ies doors, 60ies dashboard, the old small window hood, the early wheels (rears without vent holes older than front ones), 1968+ front fenders, pre 1968 rear lights, and then all the homebuilt crap on it also…

    It isn’t the nicest wording, but it rhymes, so I’d call it a Dontgivafuckbug 😎

  3. This is some sort of hoi polloi hack job. Taillights are pre-68, US semaphores stopped in the 50s, the flat unvented deck lid is some sort of aftermarket abomination, and the headlights look like sealed beams (68-on).

    That said, I’d drive it.

  4. Wish we could see it from the front (does it have the smaller, completely flat pre-1965 windshield?), as those look like semaphore cut-outs on the side. Definitely later fenders in the front (1967+). Also, doesn’t look quite right in the back for a convertible… maybe this thing has been hacked quite a bit.

  5. Weevil (Whee-ville if you wish)

    Scientific name Curculionoidea. Have long snouts and come in many colors. “There are 97,000 species making them one of the most common types of beetles”

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