Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

Karmann Ghia Convertible 1972 on 2040-cars

US $13,949.49
Year:1972 Mileage:68000 Color: White /
 Tan
Location:

Orange, California, United States

Orange, California, United States
Advertising:
Transmission:Manual
Body Type:Convertible
Vehicle Title:Clear
Engine:4 CYCL
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Private Seller
VIN: 1422011285 Year: 1972
Number of Cylinders: 4
Make: Volkswagen
Model: Karmann Ghia
Trim: VINYL
Options: Convertible
Drive Type: 4 SPD MANUAL
Mileage: 68,000
Exterior Color: White
Warranty: AS IS NO WARRANTY
Interior Color: Tan
Condition: UsedA vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections.Seller Notes:"THIS WAS A ONE OWNER LOCAL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA O.C. WELL CARED FOR DAILY DRIVER.VERY DEPENDABLE . HAS A FEW NICKS AND SCRATCHES . NOTHING BAD. DOES HAVE A SMALL DENT REAR QUARTER PANEL . THAT I WILL TRY TO FIX. BEFORE SALE. PAINT IS NEW MAYBE 2 YRS OLD, NICE.ENGINE ALSO HAS BEEN REBUILT . SHOCKS ARE ORIGINAL. FLOORS ARE RUST FREE . CONVERTIBLE TOP IS ORIGINAL AND LOOKS GOOD STILL ALSO HAS ORIGINAL REAR GLASS. TOP HAS SHRUNK A BIT IN THE REAR GLASS AREA. BUT STILL OPERATES. INTERIOR IS ALSO VERY ORIGINAL AND CLEAN. ALL IT NEEDS NOW IS A NEW OWNER. CALL ANDY FOR APPOINTMENT 714 488 1295"

 THIS WAS A ONE OWNER LOCAL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA O.C. WELL CARED FOR DAILY DRIVER.
VERY DEPENDABLE . HAS A FEW NICKS AND SCRATCHES . NOTHING BAD. DOES HAVE A SMALL DENT REAR QUARTER PANEL .  THAT I WILL TRY TO FIX. BEFORE SALE.  PAINT IS NEW MAYBE 2 YRS OLD, NICE.
ENGINE ALSO HAS BEEN REBUILT .  SHOCKS ARE ORIGINAL. FLOORS ARE RUST FREE .  CONVERTIBLE TOP IS ORIGINAL AND LOOKS GOOD STILL ALSO HAS ORIGINAL REAR GLASS. TOP HAS SHRUNK A BIT IN THE REAR GLASS.  GREAT NEWS  IS THAT THE FRONT NOSE HAS NEVER BEEN HIT OR REPLACED.  BUT DID NOTICE  THAT THE REAR BUMPER AND LOWER PANEL HAS BEEN PUSHED IN FROM THE BUMPER . AND  LEFT SIDE TAIL LIGHT HAS BEEN  REPLACED.

 AREA. BUT STILL OPERATES. INTERIOR IS ALSO VERY ORIGINAL AND CLEAN.  


    CALL ANDY FOR APPOINTMENT  714 488 1295

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Auto blog

Touring the Volkswagen Museum in Wolfsburg

Mon, 23 Sep 2013

Forgive the ribbon up top - this isn't so much of a Read This as a Look At This. Ran When Parked took a tour of the sprawling Volkswagen Museum in Wolfsburg, and while there's a spot of text about the different and unique vehicles on display in the rotating exhibits, it's largely the collection of pictures of odd, one-off VW-badged cars and vans that excites. If you're a fan of the weird and wild, this is a post you'll want to look at.
As RWP points out, this is the larger, but less busy, museum targeted purely at Volkswagen products. The smaller AutoStadt museum, meanwhile, covers a much broader swath, with products from other Volkswagen Group members. Click on over to view the extensive gallery of high-quality images from Ran When Parked.

The super-sized Atlas isn't the three-row VW should build

Fri, Dec 2 2016

In the late '50s and early '60s the Volkswagen Beetle wasn't ubiquitous in my hometown of Lincoln, Nebraska, but it came pretty damn close. Fords and Chevys dominated, but beyond the occasional MG, Triumph, or Renault the import scene was essentially a VW scene. When my folks finally pulled the trigger on a second car they bought a Beetle, and that shopping process was my first exposure to a Volkswagen showroom. For our family VW love wasn't a cult, but our '66 model spoke – as did all Volkswagens and most imports at the time – of a return to common sense in your transportation choice. As VW's own marketing so wonderfully communicated, you didn't need big fins or annual model changes to go grab that carton of milk. Or, for that matter, to grab a week's worth of family holiday. In the wretched excess that was most of Motown at the time, the Beetle, Combi, Squareback, and even Karmann Ghia spoke to a minimal – but never plain – take on transportation as personal expression. Fifty years after that initial Beetle exposure, and as a fan of imports for what I believe to be all of the right reasons, the introduction of Volkswagen's Atlas to the world market is akin to a sociological gut punch. How is it that a brand whose modus operandi was to be the anti-Detroit could find itself warmly embracing Detroit and the excess it has historically embodied? Don't tell me it's because VW's Americanization of the Passat is going so well. To be fair, the domestic do-over of import brands didn't begin with the new Atlas crossover. Imports have been growing fat almost as long as Americans have, and it's a global trend. An early 911 is a veritable wisp when compared to its current counterpart, which constitutes – coincidentally – a 50-year gestation. In comparing today's BMW 3 Series to its' '77 predecessor, I see a 5 Series footprint. And how did four adults go to lunch in the early 3 Series? It is so much smaller than what we've become accustomed to today; the current 2 Series is more substantial. My empty-nester-view of three-row crossovers is true for most shoppers: If you need three rows of passenger capacity no more than two or three times a year – and most don't – rent it forgawdsake. If you do need the space more often, consider a minivan, which goes about its three-row mission with far more utility (and humility) than any SUV.

Volkswagen considering a four-door, four-seat XL1

Fri, 22 Aug 2014

According to a report in Autocar, Volkswagen might have more in mind for the XL1 than mining it for advances to grace the next-generation Golf. Aiming to fight the Honda FCEV due for public consumption next year, we're told VW executives have put a four-door, four-seater version of the XL1 - it could be called XL2 - on the drawing board. The impetus is said to come from the top, with VW Group chairman Ferdinand Piëch intent on staying in the deep end of "super-efficent vehicles."
Autocar suspects the necessary changes could raise the weight of the car from 1,749 pounds to 2,068 pounds, which would make it four pounds less than the 2,072-pound Up! we drove a few years ago. Crucially, however, the mag thinks the extra capacity wouldn't change the two-seater's 310-mile-per-gallon rating, with tech tweaks and the aerodynamic benefit of a longer car offsetting the weight. Speculation is that the back seats would be staggered like the fronts in order to maintain the XL1's overall profile.
We recently heard about another XL1 variant that's gone off the radar entirely, the Ducati-engined XLR that we thought we'd see at the Geneva Motor Show and that was said to be going into production, so this one could go the same way. The biggest hurdle to making such an idea a reality, though, could be the price: the current XL1 costs 110,000 euros ($146,116). If VW really is going to compete with the Honda FCEV and the Toyota FCV - $70,000 in Japan - that might be where it wants to start.