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January 25, 2009 @ 12:00 am

The Ultimate VW Campervan?

There have been a number of campervan concepts developed recently, this one has some environmentally friendly additions, but remarkably keeps the old rock and roll bed!

 

 

 

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January 24, 2009 @ 12:00 am

How Well Do You Know Your VW Camper Van History?

If you’re a relative newcomer to the workld of VW campervans, you might find this a helpful article. it helps you through the early models, from the first split-screen campers to the bay window, plus the VW Beetle and Kharmann Ghia. There’s another article with more detail on the development of the VW camper van at http://www.vwcampersforever.com/vw-camper-models/what-came-before-the-vw-camper

Volkswagen Camper & Beetle Guide - A History of VW Bay Window & Split Screen Camper Vans & Beetles

By [http://ezinearticles.com/?expert=Mike_Aarons]Mike Aarons

Camper Van / Bus

The Split Screen Bus

Split screen buses were first produced in 1949 and continued on for the next 18 years. They were known unimaginably as the Type 2. The first Type 2 was called the Bulli and came in 2 models the Kombi and Panel van. The Microbus was introduced a year later in 1950. Splitties, Type 2, or Split Screen Volkwagen buses came in many guises; barndoor, panel van, kombi,minibus, standard, deluxe, barn door, ambulance, fire van, single cab pickup and double cab pickup, Samba, with various options due to their age such as walk-through, double door, semaphore and safari to name but a few. However it is the Samba model that is the most desirable of all.

The VW Bay Window Camper Van

The VW Bay Window Camper van, still known as a Type 2, was first produced in 1967 and continued being produced in 1979. It was much improved on the split screen, offering a slightly larger body so could carry larger loads, larger and more powerful engines up to a 2 litre model towards the end of production, better electrics, a more refined and comfortable ride. However for many the bay window lacks the original design of the Splittie. It is really the Bay Window bus that really accelerated the use of these unique vans as a mobile home or camper van. These vans were converted by various firms, such as Westfalia (also known as a Westy, Danbury, Devon, Dormobile and Viking. These firms offered different interior configurations for sleeping, cooking and storage as well as differing elevating roof types. These ranged from small staight up vertical pop top roofs to front hinged, rear hinged and side hinged roofs, sleeping between 2 to 7 people!

Volkswagen Beetle / Bug

The Volkswagen Beetle (known unimaginatively as the Type 1 was produced as an economic and robust little car for the people. Ferdinand Porsche was instructed to build a car that was capable of transporting two adults and three children at a speed of 100 km/h. The VW Beetle started production in 1938, finishing a massive 65 years later in 2003. It was designed to be mechanically simple, economical to maintain and robust, with as little to go wrong as possible. This has probably underpins why so many Beetles are still on the road, and why it has its reputation for reliability and sturdiness. Production continued in Mexico until the New Beetle was introduced.

Karmann Ghia

The Karmann Ghia started production in 1955, the results of Volkswagen, Karmann a German coach building company and Ghia, an Italian design company. It was marketed by Volkswagen as a 2%2B2 coupe and convertible and was built using the running gear of the VW Beetle. Although the Karmann Ghia had the looks of a sports car, it never had the power or speed. The Karmann Ghia in both coupe and convertible forms is still a very sought after car and is very desirable. In 1961, VW introduced the Type 34 Karmann Ghia (or Razor Edge Ghia), based on its new Type 3 platform. It featured the new 1500 cc engine and the result was the fastest, most luxurious, and most expensive Volkswagen at the time.

Click here to view a VW Split Screen camper van / bus for sale —> http://www.onlyaircooled.com/forsale.asp?t=6

Click here to view a VW Bay Window camper van / bus for sale —> http://www.onlyaircooled.com/forsale.asp?t=2

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mike_Aarons http://EzineArticles.com/?Volkswagen-Camper-and-Beetle-Guide—A-History-of-VW-Bay-Window-and-Split-Screen-Camper-Vans-and-Beetles&id=1749846

http://www.goarticles.com/cgi-bin/rss-search.cgi?term=%22vw%20t4%22&l=10&s=1&c=none&D1=subject

 

 

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January 16, 2009 @ 11:13 am

Buying a VW Campervan

You shouldn’t buy a VW camper if…

 

  • You just have to have a VW camper and it becomes an emotional, not a rational decision
  • It just looks cool or well restored (look underneath, check it thoroughly, think about it, compare several campers…)
  • You haven’t thought about how much time you want to spend maintaining it
  • You’re about to go on a trip and won’t have time to spend checking it over, doing some shorter runs etc
  • It is old, has done a lot of miles or has a six volt system when you want reliability
  • You think it will be fast and/or economical

Beware…the nostalgic appeal of old VW campers can override rational thinking:

http://www.vwcampersforever.com/category/buying-and-selling

Beware of seductive pictures of rustbuckets, next to beautifuly retored examples -unless you have time, money and high levels of skill and resourcefulness.

OK, so you’re still looking, take this checklist with you …

Look out for rust and poor repairs, checking for

  • Rust on the bottom 6 inches all around…
  • Rust on chassis box sections
  • Rust on front and rear outriggers
  • Rust on roof guttering, sills, wheel arches
  • Rust on floors in front of the rear wheels
  • Rust behind front seats
  • Rust round the fuel tank
  • Welded repair plates which can hide trapped moisture and rust

Take some old clothes and GET UNDERNEATH TO LOOK!

Engine/gearbox checks

  • Oil leaks near the gearbox flange usually mean an ‘engine out’ job
  • Listen for bearing whines in the gearbox
  • Check all the gears work and don’t jump out of gear (VW Campers tend to have a floppy gear change –that’s normal)
  • Pull and push the bottom pulley wheel: if you can feel a loud ‘clunk clunk’ the engine needs to be rebuilt. A very small movement is OK

Other things to look out for

  • Check heaters and controls – if they don’t work they will require new heat exchangers
  • A smell of petrol inside the vehicle can mean rubber pipes have perished and need replacing
  • Check round the fuel tank - they can rust through where they come in contact with more rust
  • Steering should be direct with little play. If not check the steering box

 

Checking the inside

  • Look at the state of the interior
  • Check level of equipment and what’s in working order
  • Check working order of beds,
  • If it’s a pop-top, check the state of the bellows, struts etc
  • Check the state of the headlining, floor and inside cupboards for mildew, dirt and damage

 

Balance what you find against what you are prepared to pay, what work you are prepared to do and the time you have.

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January 15, 2009 @ 12:00 am

VW Camper Vans - What to look for in buying different models

Early campers up to 1967 (the vw split screen campers) are really collector’s items now and sell for more than the campers made 30 years later. They are also slow and small. The 68-71 Westfalia bay window camper still had the weak upright 4 cylinder engine and the extra camper weight made for a slow ride and short engine life.

Then in 1972, the VW van got the larger Type 4 engine(same basic motor that went in the Porsche 914) so it had more power, but still blew around in the wind a lot and those campers were made until 1979. The later 70’s models only came in three colors. The basic camper was the white one, the middle grade was orange and the top of the line was the pea-green color.

In 1980, the new much squarer, larger body styles were introduced which was called the VWT25 (known as the Vanagon in America . These type 25s had a wider footprint on the ground, better suspension which cut down on the cross wind issues a lot, as does having the right “stiff” sidewall tyres on these vans as well, as passenger car tyres are unsafe on these vans. They weighed more, but still used the type 4 engine until half way through the 1983 model year when VW went to a water-cooled engine with the radiator up front and the motor still in the back. In 1986, they increased the engine size to 2.1 litres but stilll had barely 100 hp. to move a 5000 pound camper around.

The Westfalia, with more of its camper weight on the driver’s side than the passenger side, can have a noticeable lean to it as most of these campers have over 200k on them now.

The 86-91 model years are good ones to go for and parts are still readily available. Even the bay window 68-79 buses are getting to be collector’s items now and parts are getting hard to find as well. The “waterboxer” engine on the VWT25 looks a lot like the aircooled motor when you open up the rear hatch, but it does have a problem with leaking head gaskets so make sure that’s been repaired before you buy one. Bleeding the air out of the cooling system is a challenge that only a Vanagon trained mechanic will know how to do. If not done properly, you can fry a cylinder head in a matter of miles.

The Vanagon also has another quirk; it has 43 radiator hoses and to replace all of them(entire kits are available) will be about £300. The automatic transmission is awful on hills and gets worse mileage than the 4 speed manual. Petrol consumption is not great. Don’t buy one thinking you’re going to get 25 MPG as most of them get in the 16-18 range when they’re running properly and you aren’t in a hurry.

The manual transmission with over 150k on it can and eventually will be difficult to shift into 3rd and 4th gears due to a cracked slider hub assembly. Make sure that that has been taken care of, or prepare to rebuild the transmission. If you want more power for your Vanagon, there are conversion kits to put several different Subaru engines and the transplant, although expensive, does provide much better power and torque and sometimes, better mpg.

To get 25 mpg, you’d have to fiind an old 82 or 83 diesel camper and they are VERY rare. They crank out a whopping 58 hp and definitely do zero to sixty in an afternoon. If you want 25 mpg, then the best bet is converting your Vanagon over to the late model VW TDI diesel. The true cream of the campers, is a 91 Westy Syncro as it has all wheel drive and more ground clearance than the regular Vanagon chassis.

Step-by-step guide here

http://www.vwcampersforever.com/category/buying-and-selling

powered by Yahoo Answers

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January 14, 2009 @ 1:09 pm

Richard Wilson (or is it Victor Meldrew?) takes on the VW Campervan

Richard Wilson has been driving around Britain – in the driving seat of a nostalgic BBC4 documentary series, Britain’s Best Drives. Sitting behind the wheel of half a dozen classic cars (like a latterday Toad, minus the leather gauntlets), he’s journeyed back into “the golden age of motoring”.

A pea-green and crean VW campervan is one of the stars of the show although he too found the gear change problematic “I’ve gone into reverse,” he hisses, spitting out the words like tin tacks and sounding exactly like Victor Meldrew, that rasping wrinkly of One Foot in the Grave with whom the actor is fated to be for ever identified.

Read more in The Scotsman

http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/features/Interview-Richard-Wilson.4855667.jp

Perhaps Richard Wilson would have enjoyed his VW camper van experience more with some travelling companions

http://www.vwcampersforever.com/travels-with-vw-campers/vw-camper-travel-with-gertrude-and-molly

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January 12, 2009 @ 12:00 am

Cool VW Campers at the Type 2 VW Campervan Show in Yokohama

The VW campervan has universal appeal and shows are held across the globe. Like the Mini, the VW camper has iconic status in Japan as this album form the Yokohama type 2 VW Van Show demonstrates.

Some great examples, look out for the Stars and Stripes pick up as well as classic splitties and bays and smart sambas.

 

 

For mor information on early VW campers go to

http://www.vwcampersforever.com/the-appeal-of-vw-campers/vw-camper-nostalgia-trip-and-history-lesson-in-pictures

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