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A very interesting 4-page article from the October '85 issue of a South African CAR magazine. I scanned it in high resolution, so that you can read it easily, just click on the pic to enlarge - gripping stuff, it is like the background of a Wilbur Smith bestseller. The buggy mentioned is a South African Glitterbug - an exact copy of the famous EMPI Imp buggy. I saw one in Pretoria two years ago, and there has been standing another one for ever at Van der Brink Motors, a local VW shop - one of the most notable features of this buggy and the Imp is the external pod for a tachometer, outside the cabin on the bonnet, so you actually look at it through the window.
My Dad had a Friend that Bought a Brand New RED Non - Glitter
After a while the paint wore through to expose a good looking Glitter Green.
Some Day I must dig through my folks old Pics and post "the good old days here"
In the 70 and 80's there were lots of buggys in Cpt and over Xmas Hermanus was flooded with Buggys from the entire country. Being a young kid and into buggys I took note of all the differant types and this is the first time I have seen a Buggy like the Top Pic.
But I will Check with My Dad (Tom Snr) if he knows about this body.
”Experience is what you get when you do not get what you want”
It is a straight mould from the EMPI Imp (which, to the best of my knowledge was never available in SA), you can even see the oval on the side pods for the EMPI logo. There was another one standing at VandenBrink Motors a while ago, but I never took a pic of it.
A similar bodyshell was also made & sold by Karmann...
The reason for the 20L/100km fuel consumption is obvious. It's because of the aircon. They had to keep the motor running whenever they stopped to look around so the aircon could keep things cool.
Pine wrote:It is a straight mould from the EMPI Imp (which, to the best of my knowledge was never available in SA), you can even see the oval on the side pods for the EMPI logo. There was another one standing at VandenBrink Motors a while ago, but I never took a pic of it.
Was at VdB last month again, and it was still there! Unfortunately it was an SWB shell, converted to LWB. The bulge on the bonnet is actually meant for an external rev counter, not the filler cap!