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  2. Volkswagen Beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Beetle

    Volkswagen donated the car to the Smithsonian Institution for permanent exhibition in its industrial history section. [107] By 1973, over 16 million Beetles had been manufactured. [108] On 1 July 1974, the final Beetle was produced at the Wolfsburg plant after 11,916,519 examples were made there.

  3. Volkswagen Beetle in Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Beetle_in_Mexico

    This Final Edition consisted of 2,999 units for sale to the general public in Volkswagen dealers across Mexico, while one (the last one to be produced), would be immediately shipped to the Volkswagen Museum in Wolfsburg, Germany, testifying a historic age which ended on July 30, 2003, when the last Volkswagen Beetle (the unit number 21'529,464 ...

  4. Volkswagen Type 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Type_4

    The Volkswagen Type 4 is a compact / midsize family car, manufactured and marketed by Volkswagen of Germany as a D‑segment car from 1968 to 1974 in two-door and four-door sedan as well as two-door station wagon body styles. The Type 4 evolved through two generations, the 411 (1968–1972) and 412 series (1972–1974).

  5. List of best-selling automobiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling...

    The 1966 Volkswagen Beetle. It is the all-time best-selling car with only a single body style. It is the all-time best-selling car with only a single body style. Since the introduction of the Benz Patent Motorwagen in 1886, some passenger cars and light trucks can claim to being the highest selling vehicles in the automobile markets.

  6. Volkswagen Karmann Ghia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volkswagen_Karmann_Ghia

    The 1955 Type 14 Karmann Ghia was just the second Volkswagen passenger car ever produced, after the Beetle, and launched six years before the Type 3 notchbacks, fastbacks and Variants (squarebacks). They were faster and more expensive than the Beetle, but very cramped in the back, despite their wider, postwar and nearly slabsided body design.

  7. Bradley Automotive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_Automotive

    Even though still based on a VW Beetle chassis, the GT II was a much more sophisticated vehicle than the earlier GT. [12] New features included true gull-wings doors with frames, sliding safety glass in the doors and interior door releases with gas struts, a lower sill to ease ingress and egress, improved bumpers and steel reinforcing in the roof.