-
Recent Posts
- UAW Files Unfair Labor Practice Against American Axle
- Stellantis FaSTLAne 2030 Financial Reform Revealed
- Memorial Day Weekend Gas Prices Highest in Four Years
- Chinese Dongfeng Voyah Vehicles Coming to EU Via Stellantis
- Stellantis, Jaguar Land Rover Sign MOU on Tech Development
- Volvo Cars and Google Gemini Add AI Tech
- HondaJet APMG S Upgrade Expands to Mexico
- May 2026 Light Vehicle Production Forecast is Down Again
- Chrysler Recalls Jeep Cherokee Models for PTU Failures
- Coming Soon Chinese-Built Jeeps?
- BMW N.A. Starts Preferred Pricing at IONNA Charging Sites
- Trumped – National Average for Fuel Prices Climbing Yet Again
- First Glance – Acura Hybrid SUV
- BMW Group to Convert Preferred Shares to Common
- California Starts $1 Billion Rebate Program for Electric Trucks
Recent Comments
- Magna International on Magna International Posts Q1 2026 EPS Loss of $0.04
- Council on Foreign Relations on Iran and Strait of Hormuz on AAA – Pump Gasoline Prices Still Soaring
- Autocrat on Stellantis Subordinated Perpetual Hybrid Bonds on Stellantis Posts Full Year 2025 Loss of €22.3B
- Michigan Governor Whitmer on Pew – Confidence in Trump Dips, Fewer Support His Policies
- Porsche Motorsport Daytona Victory on Daytona 24 Hours – Old and New Stars Getting Ready to Run
Archives
Meta
Tag Archives: nazi germany
Volkswagen Debuts Most Fuel-Efficient VW Beetle Ever
In 1998 the “New Beetle” returned, successfully riding a wave of nostalgia that was triggering automotive retro designs – including the Ford Thunderbird, BMW Mini, Chrysler PT – creating another generation of Beetle owners, most of whom thought WW2 was a history class. In yet another irony, the new Beetle was a mere sales footnote in Germany, where buyers thought the design too frivolous – no Love Bugs for them. All told about 500,000 New Beetles were sold in the U.S. – 10% of the original Beetle’s U.S. volume, as the competition in small cars had heightened considerably, notably by the Japanese Big Three – Toyota, Nissan and Honda. Continue reading
