Staff Cars

1968 VW Beetle assembly – Our Shed

With his Bug chassis done, Glenn Torrens drops a body on top and tops-up the lot

After a couple of months of evening and weekend work, my backyard bargain 1968 VW Beetle project car was looking terrific. I’d fixed seme minor rust and applied a fresh coat of its glorious retro-but-real Safari Beige paint to the interior and underside, leaving the outside skin with its 50-plus years of patina. With that work completed, the body was ready to be placed onto a chassis.

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The seats are from an early Mazda MX-5. Reupholstered in durable two-tone vinyl, they are an ideal size for the Bug’s small cabin

Although all VW Beetles are old these days – the last and therefore youngest Aussie-made Bug came off the Melbourne production line 45 years ago – I always like to add a sprinkle of modern (!) tech and drivability to my Bugs. Usually I rebuild them with the later, smarter, safer and better-handling semi-trailing arm design rear suspension rather than the older models’ stone-age swing-axle rear suspension.

| Read next: VW Beetle body work

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Good second-hand doors were fitted to the body and assembled with new fasteners and rubbers. I also rust-proofed the door internals

I had a chassis, bought from another VW enthusiast, in good condition that needed little more than a coat of glossy black paint to be road-ready. To ensure many more years of trouble-free use, I installed all fresh parts such as tie-rods, wheel bearings, brakes and bushes.

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The front discs are top-quality DBA slotted rotors I bought in the 1990s. I teamed them with new calipers/pads, master cylinder, rear drums and shoes, and all hoses for a 100 percent new brake system

With the chassis rebuilt to the stage where it was almost ready to be placed on its wheels, I installed a new rubber seal and asked a few mates to help me lift the body onto the chassis.

With the body on, I could string-in the refurbished wiring harness (I cleaned the fuse box terminals, repaired some wires and fitted all new fuses), plumb the fuel system (including an electric fuel pump to better suit a more powerful motor) and re-install all the fiddly bits such as the door latches and windows. Everywhere, I fitted fresh rubbers and rebuilt or new components, such as a new band-tinted laminated windscreen.

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The pedals were disassembled and electro-plated. Yes, there’s one set here: the second is for my new race Bug more on that in a future issue!

Despite the hoary, tarnished, half-century-old appearance of this Bug, I carefully chose the best components from my stash of spare parts – fuel tank, speedo, door light switches, gearstick etc – to assemble it.

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I also began considering what I would like to do with the interior of my little street car. I wanted this car to be driver-focussed and fast, with no extra ‘fluff’. I bought a pair of Mazda MX-5 seats for a bargain price. They are great in a Bug as they don’t weigh much and are compact, ideal for the VW’s narrow interior. I left-out the bench rear seat to reduce weight. This was all to support my ambition of making this Bug light, simple… minimalist.

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Carpet underside fitted with press studs for quick and easy removal. Beats vacuuming

After staring at my car one afternoon while having a beer, I decided that removable carpets suited this minimalist mood, too. I found some inexpensive brown carpet that would be a good complement to the car’s paint colour; I cut it to shape and installed press-studs to the carpet edges and the VW body. With the VW’s chrome dash trims that I carefully polished, the shiny press-studs not only allow the carpet to be removed in seconds, but they also provide an extra sprinkle of sparkle to the interior, adding to the growing retro-race/outlaw vibe of the car.

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14×6-inch rims are smaller but fatter than the Bug’s original 15×4.5. A 195/65-14 tyre will help performance when teamed with a ‘hottie’ motor. Which style wheel should I choose?

With my seating and interior sorted and the mechanicals under control, I really like how my patina’ed Bug is coming together!

 

From Unique Cars 458, Oct 2021

 

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