@Calum - You put much of what we see on cable TV to shame. I see shows like "What on Earth" and "Mysteries of the Abandoned" and they waste a lot of time with useless speculation and red herrings. Even newer series that I wanted to like, like Smithsonian's "Engineering Repurposed" and "How did they Build That?" spend a lot of time with their stable of engineers who end up just being talking heads reading from a script (It seems that they're mainly there for how they look on camera). I've seen a few of your videos and what a breath of fresh air they are compared to what we get from these bigger studios. THANK YOU! (I'm posting this twice hoping you'll see it.)
Hi Calum, this was really interesting. There was another vehicle there with a Beetle engine at the same time, it can be seen in many of the pictures, the swedish Aktiv Snow Trac. I live in Sweden and lived in a small village when I was a kid in the 70's and I remember passing one everyday on my way to school. Ice fishing is popular her and this man had taken it to the next level, he had made a hatch in the floor for fishing, and heating. I begged my father to buy one, but he just bought a boring snowmobile. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Trac
I really miss the simplicity and repairability of the old Beetles. They probably wouldn't sell nowadays with their lack of creature comforts, but I fondly remember working on my Dad's with him. Might not have been the most reliable, but you could fix almost anything that did go wrong.
I knew a guy who was stationed at an Arctic radar site in the 1960s. He said they had a beetle that was started at the beginning of winter and stayed running until spring. Only turned off for 10 minutes or so once a month to change the oil. It was supposed to be their emergency vehicle, but he said they used it mostly to drive to the nearest town to buy beer. I imagine that wasn't a short drive.
@joecool4656 probably 2-3 gallons a day just idling. I found something on the internet that a modern vehicle burns about 0.08 gallons per hour per liter Beetles of that era were +/- 1.5L engines. The carburetor would probably be less efficient than EFI, but there would be less drag without a water pump and other accessories. So my SWAG is about 0.1 gallons per hour.
This video should be mandatory for all marketing teams of automotive companies of today. “They don’t make cars like they used to…” more like they don’t market cars like they used to! Well done, once again.
@@Weromano maybe in some of the Argentine bases that are further north and don't get as cold. Still, they probably wouldn't have a need for a regular car.
@@maxmeister747 That's not uncommon with old diesel engine construction equipment, but I wouldn't try it with a modern gasoline vehicle that's mostly plastic under the hood.
I grew up in the harsh winters of northern Ontario in Canada. I remember as a small child in the early 70's my parents drove a couple of Beetles. Whatever cold and snow winter dished out, those cars never failed to start and get us down the road. Of course, heat in those cars was chancy at best.
@@storytimewithunclekumaran5004 If all the shrouds were intact on the engine, and the hoses to the fan in good shape and fitted well you could get just enough heat to to prevent most of the windshield from re-freezing after you'd cleared it. The hoses lasted several years if untouched but common for the sheet-metal shrouds to get bent, damaged, or rust out in a few years where road salt was used in the winter.
@@P_RO_ And if my memory serves correct they didnt actually produce much heat.. I think on V.W. maybe just the vans there was a option for a gas heater.. I live in Canada under similar conditions to the antarctic and I remember those cars being extra cold.
@@storytimewithunclekumaran5004 They did have heat... Or something that resembled heat... Theoretically... On paper.... Downhill with a tailwind.... In a pleasant daydream that it's not actually January and your teeth aren't chattering.... Yes, they had heaters, but they weren't very good or durable.
@@storytimewithunclekumaran5004 Yep- darn little heat. The optional gas heater was available in Beetles in Europe I think as I've seen pictures. You could definitely get it in the Type 2 bus or pick-up here. Probably the biggest issue with selling VW's was the lack of heat...
At the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, there was a morning so cold that the reporters' and photographers' cars would not start--somewhere between zero and -30 degrees Farenheit--there were a number of cracked blocks and ruptured radiators. But my 1972 Beetle, despite being parked outdoors, started right up and took me to the venue!
i love that "Sue's" dad was able to see her finish the car before he passed. i cant even imagine all the memories locked away in his mind of those little cars
Annoyingly, some of the footage from my interview with Sue got lost! This is why you never film an interview on 2 hours of sleep... However I hope you guys enjoyed the quick interview. Here's a brilliant short film where she goes into more detail on the project th-cam.com/video/Ckc0H9u0ziM/w-d-xo.html
YT started me halfway through this video like I was watching it before even though it came out 10 minutes ago, idk why that happened. Love your vids they're super good.
When I was 18 in 92 I got my first car, a lowered 64 bug. What a fun car. I ended up with several beetles and a 64 Karmann Ghia. I wish I could afford to get another bug from 67 or earlier. 67 is a very good year because they are the lightest bugs and they came with 12 volt batteries and electric systems. But the 57 and 1/2 and earlier beetles are the coolest with the oval or earlier split rear windows. But those are $100k cars now if they're nice. If I could afford it I'd have one, with a modified later engine with 100 hp instead of 25 or 40. They're my favorite cars. I've been to Der Autostadt, the VW museum in Wolfsburg Germany, built on the original factory grounds. Their old car collection includes a lot of really cool old cars besides historical VWs. This video was fun and interesting, thanks.
Calum, another excellent presentation. I have had 4 Volkswagens in my life. One of my first driving lessons was in a 66 beetle. When I was 17 I bought a 68 beetle. That car took me on lots of adventures and taught me lots about mechanical things, it started a love of mechanics that saw me through a 47 year career as a mechanic. I traded it off on a brand new 1976 VW Rabbit and in 1979 I bought a first year available in Canada, Rabbit GTI. Unfortunately, west coast of Canada winters and the salt got the better of the 79. They were all great cars.
THANK YOU FROM the bottom of my heart!!!!! You're offhanded mention of the Mini with tank treads was more helpful to me than you can imagine. For years I've been trying to reconcile a childhood core memory image of a Mini with tank treads and always came up blank on the specific memory I was looking for. You just posted it. It was like dropping a 4-long Tetris piece into a perfect slot to vaporize 4 full rows. It just felt SO GOOD. Thank you thank you thank you! Edit- off to watch your Mini-Trac video now! Can't believe I'd missed it I thought I had seen your back catalog in full.
Good story appreciate it. Just for the record, the isolated exhaust is actually the intake, The thin tube allow some exhaust up to the center where the carb sits, to heat up the intake air.
Why would you heat up the intake air? Wouldn't that make the engine less efficient? Some turbocharged cars even use intercoolers to cool the intake air after it has been compressed.
@@jannikheidemann3805 Well almost all cars with carburetors have some heating on the intake. Since intake "vacuum" lowers the pressure in the intake the air loses temperature, causing the the carb to get cold. The intake heat improves the evaporation of the air-fuel mix. and prevents water in the mix to freeze. Many cars also heat the air before the carburetor for the same reasons, VW got that in the early sixties.
@@larsbr4519a lot of the air was drawn through an aluminum housing that was mounted on the exhaust manifold. A stiff yet flexible aluminum hose attached to the afore mentioned aluminum housing and connected to the air filter housing. Once the intake manifold was heated by the water/antifreeze mixture to 180 degrees a small temperature sensitive coiled spring would expand and a baffle would close stopping the heated air from the exhaust manifold. The process was repeated every time the engine was below a certain temperature and that was probably about 60 degrees or a little lower.
Although I no longer have a Beetle, I do still have my printed copy of How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive: A Manual of Step-by-Step Procedures for the Compleat Idiot by John Muir. The book was illustrated by Peter Aschwanden, who also illustrated The Septic System Owner's Manual, which is a great book on septic tanks, fields, the care of, etc.
Yes, I also still have my copy of the John Muir VW manual. The licence plate on the Kiwi Beetle was ASxxxx and my red '63 VW Beetle licence plate was CXxxxx so there is a possibility NZ Antarctic base had a VW Beetle on the continent before the Aussies. It would fit the pattern (Phar Lap, pavlova, Manuka honey, etc.) if the Aussies were enjoying the hospitality on a visit to the Kiwi Antarctic base, saw the ASxxxx VW Beetle and then (true to their convictions) arranged a freebie of their own for a subsequent season.
Amazing that only just 6 days ago I visited an AvtoVAZ Museum in Tolyatti and saw there a one-of-a-kind Lada Niva that worked at Bellingshausen Station in the 90s. And here is your video about another normal car in Antarctica. True example of a Baader-Meinhof phenomenon.
I love your comment. But please explain to me: what is a Baader-Meinhof phenomenon? The German terrorist Andreas Baader happened to grow up in my neighborhood in Munich Germany. Unfortunately I never saw him freezing his butt in a Beetle. I hope he is driving a cold beetle from Antarctica to Eternity.
This was such a fascinating story. I would have never heard about it if it wasn't for your incredible research and storytelling. Calum, the history genre goat!
Fascinating story. I recall growing up we had several Beetles here in Canada along with GMC Suburbans. The Beetle would start in the winter but you had to sit in the freezing car with the clutch in until the gear oil warmed up. Clearing the windshield was done manually with a scraper while wearing outdoor gloves. Our last one had a gas heater which worked the second half of the drive in town. So when the heater started working you shut it off. My father was 6ft8 and moved the seat off the track to fit in it. One reason the Beetle and Fiat 500 worked in such cold conditions was because they were air cooled. With a water(antifreeze coolant) cooled engine the coolant might freeze and crack the engine block. But the VW was actually oil cooled which did not expand and contract as much as the water. Also they were easy to maintain. The engine is attached by a few bolts and can be removed in about 15 minutes.
I wonder if there are places where it's cold enough that a water-cooled engine would be better off with oil in its radiator than antifreeze. Oil has a lower specific heat, but that might not be a problem if it's far enough below zero.
I am amazed that other things survived the extreme cold. Like rubber hoses, tires and such. Likely the stations were open during the summer months with limited activity before and after winter. (Picture a scene from March of the Penguins) Once I visited my uncle during the winter when it would dip down to -30 at night. I had a VW diesel with a block heater and battery blanket. But needed a push start in the morning with his car. After that it was fine... @@pcno2832
On the bit about the few engine bolts: A buddy of mine in high school drove a sunshine yellow '72 Bug he'd gotten from his Mom. He pulled the whole engine out of the car during auto shop to do... something with the valves (I can't recall as it's been 2 decades). Our teacher was a jerk and told him he'd be flunked if that engine wasn't back in the car by the end of class (1hr periods) Sure enough it was. Probably didn't take him more than 15 min to install the sucker
Nice work on the 4 1/4 model paint job! Beautifully realistic pealing paint work. I drove a yellow '74 Super Beetle for 14 years. It would go just about anywhere, but was an under-powered maintenance nightmare.
as an aussie, i find this both riveting and as much as how i'm baffled by how obscure this is and that i've never once heard about it until now good work! :)
A well told story. Very much like a loyal dog tale in which the unappreciated little dog is the hero. I learned to drive in a 1300 beetle like your model. They differed with the older models, beyond the 1300 on the rear lid, they also had flat wheel covers instead of the deep parabolic shape, a wider reflector on the license plate lamp and a larger rear window. When you bought a new beetle you got a subscription to the owners club magazine which often had tips on off-roading in a VW; straddle deep ruts with wheels on the centerline ridge and the edge of the road.
As an Aussie, I can confirm, this is typical "she'll be right mate, engineering !" LoL 😂 Because of our insane summer temperatures, 45⁰+C (113⁰F), air cooled VW's Beetles and Kombi vans, were very, very, popular here in the 60's and 70"s 👍😆 Love this video ! Cheers mate 🍺
As a CFS volounteer I put too many burning VWs out. They get hot and do all sorts of weird things. And then catch fire. So many wobble heads [follows the engines] waffle crap about their inferior unsafe cars. May be just ok as a city commuter car,, though are actually ok on rough roads until something falls off,, and they catch fire. Not good in very hot conditions, not good in very cold conditions and very mediocre in between. Lovely swing axle suspension that cause wheel tuck and they roll over. I had a couple of VW repairers local,, long weekend there would be a queu of broken Zombies outside on Tues morning
@@ldnwholesale8552 How many decades has it been since VW sold a vehicle with a swing axle or air cooled magnesium engine block ??? You must be in your 90's !! lol
@@ldnwholesale8552 They caught on fire most often from folks using incorrect fuel line. I can't tell you how many VW's I've worked on with the metal fuel line missing and the rubber routed right through the tin hole. Since they're easy to work on there were a lot of DIY'er who created time bombs (fire bombs?)
That makes no sense, because its air cooled driving in 45C+ temps would make it likely to overheat. in those high temps water cooling is better to keep an engine cool.
I love my VW’s! I am rebuilding my 83 Vanagon diesel. And my daughter is inheriting her great grandmothers 67 beetle . I still enjoy wrenching on VW’s and there is still a strong culture of VW enthusiast that use their bugs as daily drivers to this very day.
15:51 - That is a pair of Atlas Copco Cobra 47LA gasoline powered rock drills. I have one. If you want another video idea these rock drills would be a good bet.
I had a 1963 Beetle in 1989, it cost me $1000 and i painted it yellow gold and deep indian red. When i took the front indicator off the lens had my birthday (DD/MM/YY) stamped inside it. Having driven it as my only transport for two years I take my hat off to anyone who could win a rally in a 63.
Oh my, as a resident of lutrawita/ Trouwanna/ Tasmania, where the modern Australian Antarctic Division (aka Antdiv) is based, this is going to be a thrill. We're an island who feel very attached to Australian Antarctic research. Will definitely pass it on to my mates who either work there or are just Antdiv nutters. Thanks so much!!😍 Edit: Oh my, the Nella Dan. There's a sad and tragic tale 😢😢😢
@@CalumRaasay Mate, if it can survive in the outback, Antarctica is going to bloody easy!! EDIT: - Or maybe the cheeky bugger just wanted a free VW, after all, they're bloody reliable cars!!
The 4 1/4 Beetle might actually be somewhat preserved. Things that are extremely cold tend to decay less quickly even though it is in corrosive salt water.
Thank you Calum, I had no knowledge of ANARE sending VWs to Antarctica. The VW marketing campaign of the time was run by DDB (Doyle Dane Bernbach): it was possibly *the* best advertising campaign for any car ever, including short films and a huge print media presence, all featuring a distinctly tongue-in-cheek theme. Dad had 5 Beetles over many years and loved them.
Calum, your work is sooo good. Your topics are always interesting and original. The stories are well written and researched, and the videos look fantastic. Just wanted to say thank you!
In 1987, I purchased a Beetle as my second car, because I worked in delivery, and needed a reliable back up vehicle. My main car was a full size Jeep Cherokee Chief, with big, wide BF Goodrich all terrain A/T tires. Which worked great in snow. But one day, it broke down, and I had to use the beetle. No problem; mounted chains on the rear tires. I got stuck twice; just put the car in low gear, then got out and pushed it out, and ran to catch up with the un-stuck car rolling gently up the road. Nice, durable, light, easily pushed car. Just one thing; IT WAS FREEZING INSIDE! The windshield defroster only provided a 8" circle of clear 'porthole' view on the windshield, of the outside world. Zero visibility out the side or back windows, s they were glazed over with frost, even if scraped clean, they would quickly re frost up. So it was great, as long as you never came to an intersection, or had to turn. Perfect for Antarctica, I guess. But pretty bad for any inhabited lands with normal roads.
Great video! It's the first time I heard about the Antarctic Beetles. I've owned a few of them, the last one a 1966 that I restored and sold a couple of years ago. They're so simple, reliable, and easy to maintain, and many of them remain in use in the Brazilian hinterland.
Go Australia, keep on being crazy. It's what we all love about you. What a shame that no one took care of the originals. Maybe Ground Penetrating Radar would be able to see if the original A1 is still buried.
I have to say, I really love these videos that cover kind of obscure but insanely interesting topics and this channel is probably the best at doing that!
My dad owned one of these from 1966-71 in Melbourne. He always used to tell my brother and I about the map of Antarctica it had on the interior roof. Guessing it was Antarctica 1, as he always calls it "the first car in Antarctica". He's recently started using TH-cam on his telly, so I'll tell him to watch this video and get back to me with more info.
@@CalumRaasay he replied with this, but also said he will write up some more about his memories of the vehicle and anything you might be interested in. "HZB624 - ANTARCTICA 1 BEETLE Thanks for sharing this fascinating story. Yep, that was definitely my car which I bought at a Mentone car yard in 1967. I traded it in for a crappy HT Holden in 1971 when my first child was born and we couldn't fit her pram in the Beetle. I've absolutely no idea what happened to it after that."
VW's marketing must have worked. When I was stationed in Adak, Alaska I bought a 1966 VW from another sailor who was leaving the island. Along the timeline from 1966 to 1976 the engine had been upgraded to 1800cc, the rear fender openings had been enlarged to accommodate slightly larger and much wider traction tires on the rear (but the rear bumper remained), the front fender openings had also been enlarged but it had skinny front tires (much better in snow), the front end had been torched off so that the front tires stuck out in front of the body, and some big, goofy bugeye headlights had been bolted on top of what remained of the front fenders. Oh, and it was red, too. Nothing else was done and this car was amazing up there. It always started and it went anywhere and everywhere I asked it to go - on "road" and off. The roads weren't very good up there, but I did go out with the jeep club a couple of times and did not get stuck where some of them did.
as a 27 year old being a car mechanic it always brings me joy when one of our many customers drops bye to give their old beetle some love. we have 3 in the showroom in various states of original to restored and an array of buggy's convertibles and the normal ones in service 👌
Amazing video, so well illustrated and presented. It just so happens I live in Seymour and right next to potentially one of the towns oldest local residents…. Next time I bump into him I will definitely bring this up and see if he knows anything. Thanks for the incredible content!
My first car was a 1970 VW Beetle. It was a remarkably reliable vehicle. I abused it cruelly and it just kept on running. I even once sunk it in a river, pulled it out, drained the carburetor float bowl and after spitting water out of the exhaust pipes, started up and ran for a long time! Remarkable little car!
I think many often miss what makes the beetle shine. It's not that it's never going to breakdown, it's that when it does breakdown, you can fix it 5 minutes with a paperclip and your left shoe lace.
My first car in Mexico was a 1987 special edition 1600 with 4 drums and the (in)famous AF low-compression variant. My uni friends still remember,and they also remember their oaths to never set foot inside a car I'm driving. That car got me through places Jeeps wouldn't go, rainstorms that forced tractor trailers out of the road, meter-deep "puddles", and a few very close shaves where its light steering and almost electric-like torque at low revs saved my ass in the nutso MEX traffic. I hope it's still out there somewhere, now that I finally earn enough to look for it and restore it to its scary, ferocious glory.
Seeing a new Calum video is like that time my photography teacher in high-school in 1987 gave me a 59, 71 and a 77 Transporter. I had already bought a red 64 Bug from the school narc who used his photography equipment to take some great pictures of me and some friends smoking at band hall entrance from across the football field. So weird how everything is tied together. Even Antarctica is part of my life as my dad's been there many times and let me build my firsr engine, a 1776cc VW engine, in my bedroom which I painted while he was in Antarctica playing golf I mean working. 🐞 Edit: I completely forgot about the trip to Australia and New Zealand for a month in 87-88 where a sales guy in Sydney gave me full access to an overgrown VW dealership full of 50s up NOS parts of which I brough tmany back but the best part was the people I met in the car culture. Trip of dreams.
I loved my '69 (Beetle) Bug. It would go anywhere, sometimes where 4×4s got stuck!😅 It was the most reliable, the easiest to work on... It just wasn't the safest; especially driving the freeways of LA! Cheers from California!🥂 ✌️🫶🌏☮️🕊
Amazing video as always! If you really want to fall down an Arctic rabbit hole the roligon trucks have to be the strangest arctic vehicles still in use, I’d recommend checking them out
Ohhh! I'd forgotten that Beetles could float. It was a thing when I was a kid, barely old enough to begin understand, but I remember hearing of owners fitting a propeller to the crankshaft to make an amphibious vehicle. The other mod which obviously went with this was the cut-away rear, showing off the engine. For a while, I thought every Beetle with a cut-away rear had a propeller, but I was in no position to verify it as I hardly knew what a boat propeller looked like. ;) I loved the video; thanks Calum! :)
Great Video as always Calum, I always look forward to your videos bc I learn something new. So thank you for all the time and effort you put into making this awesome content, you rock! 👍👍
It’s 1962. The Beatles were in Hamburg. My E8 dad was stationed in Munich, Germany. I was the brat. The family lived in Perlacher Forst just outside Mcgraw. He bought a ’60 VW beetle as a grocery getter. Yes, that same car that Der Adolph had drawn on a napkin in a restaurant a mere 22 years earlier. It was that diaper without clorox beige, one of the four colors that beetles came from Wolfsburg. Couldn’t stand it! Being in charge of the motor pool he assigned some PFCs to prep it for paint after the jeeps. It got squirted BMW orange, or something like it. Everybody loved it. Now, this was a problem, because both VW and BMW had HQ in Munich. The line of cars driving through Perlacher Forst to see this anomaly was endless and constant. I think my dad started a revolution amongst car owners. A car could be snazzy without being a hot rod. What did VW’s look like in the 1970’s? Easter Eggs!
The stock mid 60s Beetles when new and un-modified had very functional heating systems. The additional gas heaters (yes available on Beetles) were really only needed to warm up the cabin prior to driving or in slow town driving. I drove a restored one just last winter in Iowa during a blizzard at 10F and had to turn down the heat at highway speeds. The legendary reputation for poor heat, and non-existent defrost comes largely from heat control mismanagement, unsealed front deck lid (leading to an icy gale through the dash), rusted out heater channels, and failed door gaskets; all common on well worn examples. Beetles kept running for YEARS after many of their constituent parts had completely failed! They’re ability to get through snow is only exceeded by a modern all-wheel-drive Subaru.
Have to agree, and It's sad the people blame the design when it's really poor maintenance and neglect. I have a 1970 Karmann Ghia right now, and a few years ago we had a very dry winter that allowed me to keep driving it into January. That year I'd use it to pickup my daughter from work at 4am, and even at below zero Fahrenheit temperatures, I was comfortable.
IDK, I've driven a lot of rot box pickups, with doors about to fall off and big enough holes in the floor to Flintstone it, that still had hot heat. Parked and in motion. If you have to drive highway speed to have good heat, that's a bad system.
To add to my previous comment, my Dad was a snow plow driver for the county and had a ‘74 Beetle himself which got him to his snow plow unfailing. My Beetle had a stuck heater vent on the passenger side floor. Many times when making regular trips from Memphis, TN to Detroit, MI I would wrap some seasoned ground beef in,foil and place it up against the heat vent. Halfway through my trip it would be cooked well,done so I had my dinner before I reached my destination! I miss that little car!
Congratulations Calum, your research efforts and your joy in the telling of this tale has resulted in the best TH-cam video that I`ve watched in a long , long time. Quite simply, SUPERB !
Great story. Thank you. And good that you included Mark’s (Although sadly Mark passed away nearly 10 years ago.) beetle and how he and my dad used it. To this day I wind my dad up about it. 😂
Thanks so much for a great wee doco. And you're concise and crisp - lovely style and pace. Nice research. '71 Fiat 850 coupe driver here, this story right up my alley.
In Finland, veterinarians drove beetles because they had to get to remote farms during winter, even when the roads were not cleared of snow. Beetle was like a sled on snow.
It's unfortunate that VW Australia sold off the Antarctic beetles one after another and didn't think to keep at least one for posterity. Any one of them would be a nice specimen in a VW museum.
Absolutely brilliant. I've been waiting for a really good documentary on these bugs. I thought I had done some thorough researching on the subject myself, but man the footage and details you've found are incredible
That was an odd omission, all things considered - I guess he just has faith in his viewers' powers of deduction! Another point in favour of the Beetle in these conditions would have been the engine being at the back - not only more sheltered, but also putting the weight of the engine over the powered wheels.
@@mikkoolavijarvinen3653 I don't live in a very cold country, but the antifreezes I've seen are effective down to around -30 ⁰C, perhaps in colder countries there are products that can withstand lower temperatures, but anyway, we're talking about the 60s, I don't know what kind of technology they had at the time.
@@mikkoolavijarvinen3653 antifreeze normally goes in water! Or do you mean something that's added to petrol to stop it freezing? Petrol freezes at about -60 - does it get that cold where that base is in Antarctica?
This is very good. Disclaimer: air-cooled VW fan here, having briefly enjoyed a '67 Type 1 and currently "owned" by a '43 Type 82 and '73 Type 181. You might want to delve into the story of the Beetle road trip in 1941, which started in Athens, Greece and ended in Kabul, Afghanistan. The adventure began on May 27th, 1941 and ended in Kabul about a month later. By then, Germany and Russia were at war and the convoy, which included the Beetle, a Kübelwagen and an Opel Blitz support truck, were destroyed on orders from Berlin. Read about this in a Petersen's publication which is buried somewhere at home and may be found again someday. Recall the article mentioned the Type 1 had a fresh-air vent on top of the front firewall which did not become standard on the factory models until 1968. Not trying to create more work for you, but if you were to "run with the story," wouldn't stop you either!🙂
I grew up hearing stories about what a terrible winter car those beatles supposedly were (mostly about the heater being weak and the air being oily) , and the Aussies took it to Antarctica, successfully. I guess they weren't THAT bad after all
Yeah I imagine it was a bit cold in there. You know who else was a massive Beetle fan though? RG LeRourneau, maker of the massive overland trains! He swore by them as being super reliable, go-anywhere little machines. Ironic.
The other aspect about the Beetle's heater, which is what I experienced firsthand: Carbon monoxide poisoning. The car uses a heat exchanger with the exhaust system to pipe-in warm air into the vehicle. If there's a leak with the heat-exchanger that is suppose to funnel fresh-air, that piped-in warm air would contain carbon monoxide.
Many small cars of the 1950s and even perhaps into the early 60s only had heaters as optional extras. The Beetle heater was a standard fitting - including separate outlets for rear seat passengers (luxury!) - and was efficient until pipework or channels which the air was blown through deteriorated with age or rust. You could get oil smells through the heater in early models but redesigned heat exchangers in the early 60s (I forget which year) cured that problem.
@@phlodel as a car, it's "an" car. it goes, sorta. it stops, kinda. but, as an icon, the beetle is one of the most influential cars ever made. james may did a "cars of the people" show, and he highlighted the most iconic and "meaningful" cars, the beetle being one of them. the original morris mini cooper was another. cars that meant more than what they actually were. im a vw enthusiast, but my interests are primarily in the water-cooled realm, golfs, jettas, etc. but it's still fun seeing a properly built little beetle scooting around.
the "new" beetle, and the current iteration, are based on a golf/jetta platform. the first new beetle was using the setups out of the mk4 golf and jetta era, and they were incredibly horrible to work on. if you had to replace the computer, you had to first pull the windshield. terrible packaging. the newest generation is based off of the mk5/6/7 setups, and are much more reliable and economical, and MUCH better looking.
The "later models" that you talk about are just golfs with different body panels. Water cooled, front engine and nothing to do with the original beetle.
What an absolutely amazing story! I love car history and I’ve honestly never heard of this. Phenomenal job on this man and your quality level is outstanding!
Awesome job with your videos Sir. Great topics, nicely presented and you can tell you’re passionate about them. What a combo 🥳 Thank you from Poznań, Poland 🇵🇱🫡
Amazing presentation, totally enjoyed it. My brother had a beetle back in the 80‘s. Always started and ran flawlessly however, she loved to drink - thirsty girl that beetle.
Wish I had something interesting to add on the subject, rather I just wanna say how stoked I am every time you pop up in my subscriptions. Always thought of beetles as the goofy little cars and this has really made me appreciate them a lot more.
Came across your channel when it was recommended by Found and Explained. Haven't been able to stop watching since. Great content, definitely earned my sub.
Calum, this is bloody fascinating and thankyou for the work you have put in here. l had no idea about these VWs in the Antarctic but goes to show how good they were. We had a couple of Veedub (as they were called here in Aust) station wagons when l was a kid in the 1970s and they never let us down. German cars and bikes with the horizontally opposed air cooled motors are seriously over-engineered and that's great - l have a 1982 model BMW motorbike still going that l've owned for nearly 40 years and have always done all work on it myself. l have no idea how many 100,000s of km it has done because the odometer ceased working many years ago but up until recently l was commuting 400km a week for nearly 10 years. They really do run underwater.
Thanks to Storyblocks for sponsoring this video! Download unlimited stock media at one set price with Storyblocks: storyblocks.com/Calum
I was suprise ya didn't mention Toyota technicals in Antarctica.
StudyBlokes
@Calum - You put much of what we see on cable TV to shame. I see shows like "What on Earth" and "Mysteries of the Abandoned" and they waste a lot of time with useless speculation and red herrings. Even newer series that I wanted to like, like Smithsonian's "Engineering Repurposed" and "How did they Build That?" spend a lot of time with their stable of engineers who end up just being talking heads reading from a script (It seems that they're mainly there for how they look on camera). I've seen a few of your videos and what a breath of fresh air they are compared to what we get from these bigger studios. THANK YOU!
(I'm posting this twice hoping you'll see it.)
@@pyeitme508 that could be a whole other video!
Hi Calum, this was really interesting. There was another vehicle there with a Beetle engine at the same time, it can be seen in many of the pictures, the swedish Aktiv Snow Trac. I live in Sweden and lived in a small village when I was a kid in the 70's and I remember passing one everyday on my way to school. Ice fishing is popular her and this man had taken it to the next level, he had made a hatch in the floor for fishing, and heating. I begged my father to buy one, but he just bought a boring snowmobile.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Trac
I really miss the simplicity and repairability of the old Beetles. They probably wouldn't sell nowadays with their lack of creature comforts, but I fondly remember working on my Dad's with him. Might not have been the most reliable, but you could fix almost anything that did go wrong.
Look at how side-by-side vehicles, UTVs, sell. There's demand for a simple, easy to maintain, vehicle.
The 'heaters' were terrible, though!
They absolutely would sell, if the price was right.
I saw a cute powder blue South American made Beetle, had white wall tyres, lovely
@@JamieSteamthe tata nano. Would like to have a word
I knew a guy who was stationed at an Arctic radar site in the 1960s. He said they had a beetle that was started at the beginning of winter and stayed running until spring. Only turned off for 10 minutes or so once a month to change the oil. It was supposed to be their emergency vehicle, but he said they used it mostly to drive to the nearest town to buy beer. I imagine that wasn't a short drive.
Oh wow, perhaps on the DEW or Pinetree line or something? That sounds like a cool story!
@@CalumRaasay I'm not sure where or exactly when. I worked with him in 2001, and he was in his 70s then. So it might have even been the late 50s.
That’s wild. I wonder how much fuel it used to do that
@joecool4656 probably 2-3 gallons a day just idling. I found something on the internet that a modern vehicle burns about 0.08 gallons per hour per liter
Beetles of that era were +/- 1.5L engines. The carburetor would probably be less efficient than EFI, but there would be less drag without a water pump and other accessories. So my SWAG is about 0.1 gallons per hour.
@@WW3_Historian Oh wow that’s not actually as bad as I was thinking. Thanks for doing the math
This video should be mandatory for all marketing teams of automotive companies of today. “They don’t make cars like they used to…” more like they don’t market cars like they used to! Well done, once again.
I am actually very doubtful about any modern standard consumer cars working in antarctic conditions with little modification.
@@Weromano maybe in some of the Argentine bases that are further north and don't get as cold. Still, they probably wouldn't have a need for a regular car.
These days its all about lifestyle of the car, not the quality, in terms of the marketing.
@@Weromanoyes because they are all water-cooled, you would have to light a fire under them if you wanted them to start in the morning.
@@maxmeister747 That's not uncommon with old diesel engine construction equipment, but I wouldn't try it with a modern gasoline vehicle that's mostly plastic under the hood.
Calum continues to choose delivering quality over quantity.
And for that, we are most thankful. This one was a ripper!
Thank you!!
@@CalumRaasayThe quality of your research is unparalleled on this platform.
Upvote, then watch. You know it will be excellent!
quality over quantity all day :)
I grew up in the harsh winters of northern Ontario in Canada. I remember as a small child in the early 70's my parents drove a couple of Beetles. Whatever cold and snow winter dished out, those cars never failed to start and get us down the road. Of course, heat in those cars was chancy at best.
what heat ??
@@storytimewithunclekumaran5004 If all the shrouds were intact on the engine, and the hoses to the fan in good shape and fitted well you could get just enough heat to to prevent most of the windshield from re-freezing after you'd cleared it. The hoses lasted several years if untouched but common for the sheet-metal shrouds to get bent, damaged, or rust out in a few years where road salt was used in the winter.
@@P_RO_ And if my memory serves correct they didnt actually produce much heat.. I think on V.W. maybe just the vans there was a option for a gas heater.. I live in Canada under similar conditions to the antarctic and I remember those cars being extra cold.
@@storytimewithunclekumaran5004 They did have heat... Or something that resembled heat... Theoretically... On paper.... Downhill with a tailwind.... In a pleasant daydream that it's not actually January and your teeth aren't chattering.... Yes, they had heaters, but they weren't very good or durable.
@@storytimewithunclekumaran5004 Yep- darn little heat. The optional gas heater was available in Beetles in Europe I think as I've seen pictures. You could definitely get it in the Type 2 bus or pick-up here. Probably the biggest issue with selling VW's was the lack of heat...
At the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, there was a morning so cold that the reporters' and photographers' cars would not start--somewhere between zero and -30 degrees Farenheit--there were a number of cracked blocks and ruptured radiators. But my 1972 Beetle, despite being parked outdoors, started right up and took me to the venue!
As of Dec 2 2024, my 1972 Beetle does just fine in cold weather. The heater is fine, takes about 20 minutes to defrost the front window.
i love that "Sue's" dad was able to see her finish the car before he passed. i cant even imagine all the memories locked away in his mind of those little cars
A really sweet tribute!
Annoyingly, some of the footage from my interview with Sue got lost! This is why you never film an interview on 2 hours of sleep... However I hope you guys enjoyed the quick interview. Here's a brilliant short film where she goes into more detail on the project th-cam.com/video/Ckc0H9u0ziM/w-d-xo.html
YT started me halfway through this video like I was watching it before even though it came out 10 minutes ago, idk why that happened. Love your vids they're super good.
What a legend Sue is for building the replica. Thanks for sharing your chat with her!
You should have stayed up instead - probably still light at that time of year up there!
When I was 18 in 92 I got my first car, a lowered 64 bug. What a fun car. I ended up with several beetles and a 64 Karmann Ghia. I wish I could afford to get another bug from 67 or earlier. 67 is a very good year because they are the lightest bugs and they came with 12 volt batteries and electric systems. But the 57 and 1/2 and earlier beetles are the coolest with the oval or earlier split rear windows. But those are $100k cars now if they're nice. If I could afford it I'd have one, with a modified later engine with 100 hp instead of 25 or 40. They're my favorite cars. I've been to Der Autostadt, the VW museum in Wolfsburg Germany, built on the original factory grounds. Their old car collection includes a lot of really cool old cars besides historical VWs.
This video was fun and interesting, thanks.
I was 16 in 1990 brought a 64 bug and drove the wheels off it.
Calum, another excellent presentation.
I have had 4 Volkswagens in my life. One of my first driving lessons was in a 66 beetle.
When I was 17 I bought a 68 beetle. That car took me on lots of adventures and taught me lots about mechanical things, it started a love of mechanics that saw me through a 47 year career as a mechanic. I traded it off on a brand new 1976 VW Rabbit and in 1979 I bought a first year available in Canada, Rabbit GTI. Unfortunately, west coast of Canada winters and the salt got the better of the 79. They were all great cars.
THANK YOU FROM the bottom of my heart!!!!! You're offhanded mention of the Mini with tank treads was more helpful to me than you can imagine. For years I've been trying to reconcile a childhood core memory image of a Mini with tank treads and always came up blank on the specific memory I was looking for. You just posted it. It was like dropping a 4-long Tetris piece into a perfect slot to vaporize 4 full rows. It just felt SO GOOD. Thank you thank you thank you! Edit- off to watch your Mini-Trac video now! Can't believe I'd missed it I thought I had seen your back catalog in full.
Haha so glad to hear that! Hope you enjoy the mini track video!
Good story appreciate it. Just for the record, the isolated exhaust is actually the intake, The thin tube allow some exhaust up to the center where the carb sits, to heat up the intake air.
Oops! Showing my lack of VW knowledge
Why would you heat up the intake air? Wouldn't that make the engine less efficient?
Some turbocharged cars even use intercoolers to cool the intake air after it has been compressed.
@@jannikheidemann3805 Well almost all cars with carburetors have some heating on the intake. Since intake "vacuum" lowers the pressure in the intake the air loses temperature, causing the the carb to get cold. The intake heat improves the evaporation of the air-fuel mix. and prevents water in the mix to freeze. Many cars also heat the air before the carburetor for the same reasons, VW got that in the early sixties.
@@jannikheidemann3805well, it was in Antarctica and the air is a tad bit chillier than normal chilly.
@@larsbr4519a lot of the air was drawn through an aluminum housing that was mounted on the exhaust manifold. A stiff yet flexible aluminum hose attached to the afore mentioned aluminum housing and connected to the air filter housing. Once the intake manifold was heated by the water/antifreeze mixture to 180 degrees a small temperature sensitive coiled spring would expand and a baffle would close stopping the heated air from the exhaust manifold. The process was repeated every time the engine was below a certain temperature and that was probably about 60 degrees or a little lower.
Calum with another banger of a video! Amazing job, thanks for the unique outlook on the Beetle! Never knew this happened!!
Thank you! Really fun bit of history. Been wanting to talk about ti ever since my video on the Mini-trac all those years back!
I'm not often interested in history, but Calum manages to pull me into whatever random topic he himself has become fascinated by.
Haha glad to hear that!
Then you are interested in history. It just has to be presented well.
Random topics are the best!
Although I no longer have a Beetle, I do still have my printed copy of How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive: A Manual of Step-by-Step Procedures for the Compleat Idiot by John Muir. The book was illustrated by Peter Aschwanden, who also illustrated The Septic System Owner's Manual, which is a great book on septic tanks, fields, the care of, etc.
Yes, I also still have my copy of the John Muir VW manual. The licence plate on the Kiwi Beetle was ASxxxx and my red '63 VW Beetle licence plate was CXxxxx so there is a possibility NZ Antarctic base had a VW Beetle on the continent before the Aussies. It would fit the pattern (Phar Lap, pavlova, Manuka honey, etc.) if the Aussies were enjoying the hospitality on a visit to the Kiwi Antarctic base, saw the ASxxxx VW Beetle and then (true to their convictions) arranged a freebie of their own for a subsequent season.
Amazing that only just 6 days ago I visited an AvtoVAZ Museum in Tolyatti and saw there a one-of-a-kind Lada Niva that worked at Bellingshausen Station in the 90s. And here is your video about another normal car in Antarctica. True example of a Baader-Meinhof phenomenon.
There’s another great video in and of itself!
I love your comment. But please explain to me: what is a Baader-Meinhof phenomenon? The German terrorist Andreas Baader happened to grow up in my neighborhood in Munich Germany. Unfortunately I never saw him freezing his butt in a Beetle. I hope he is driving a cold beetle from Antarctica to Eternity.
I had a Niva, and loved it! Wish I kept it, sometimes.
This was such a fascinating story. I would have never heard about it if it wasn't for your incredible research and storytelling. Calum, the history genre goat!
Thank you!
Hi Calum, the asbestos clad manifold show was the inlet manifold with the heating tube which is attached to the exhaust manifolds. I loved this video.
Thank you - that annoyed me too.
Fascinating story. I recall growing up we had several Beetles here in Canada along with GMC Suburbans. The Beetle would start in the winter but you had to sit in the freezing car with the clutch in until the gear oil warmed up. Clearing the windshield was done manually with a scraper while wearing outdoor gloves. Our last one had a gas heater which worked the second half of the drive in town. So when the heater started working you shut it off. My father was 6ft8 and moved the seat off the track to fit in it.
One reason the Beetle and Fiat 500 worked in such cold conditions was because they were air cooled. With a water(antifreeze coolant) cooled engine the coolant might freeze and crack the engine block. But the VW was actually oil cooled which did not expand and contract as much as the water. Also they were easy to maintain. The engine is attached by a few bolts and can be removed in about 15 minutes.
I wonder if there are places where it's cold enough that a water-cooled engine would be better off with oil in its radiator than antifreeze. Oil has a lower specific heat, but that might not be a problem if it's far enough below zero.
I am amazed that other things survived the extreme cold. Like rubber hoses, tires and such. Likely the stations were open during the summer months with limited activity before and after winter. (Picture a scene from March of the Penguins)
Once I visited my uncle during the winter when it would dip down to -30 at night. I had a VW diesel with a block heater and battery blanket. But needed a push start in the morning with his car. After that it was fine... @@pcno2832
On the bit about the few engine bolts: A buddy of mine in high school drove a sunshine yellow '72 Bug he'd gotten from his Mom. He pulled the whole engine out of the car during auto shop to do... something with the valves (I can't recall as it's been 2 decades). Our teacher was a jerk and told him he'd be flunked if that engine wasn't back in the car by the end of class (1hr periods) Sure enough it was. Probably didn't take him more than 15 min to install the sucker
Nice work on the 4 1/4 model paint job! Beautifully realistic pealing paint work. I drove a yellow '74 Super Beetle for 14 years. It would go just about anywhere, but was an under-powered maintenance nightmare.
as an aussie, i find this both riveting and as much as how i'm baffled by how obscure this is and that i've never once heard about it until now good work! :)
A well told story. Very much like a loyal dog tale in which the unappreciated little dog is the hero.
I learned to drive in a 1300 beetle like your model. They differed with the older models, beyond the 1300 on the rear lid, they also had flat wheel covers instead of the deep parabolic shape, a wider reflector on the license plate lamp and a larger rear window.
When you bought a new beetle you got a subscription to the owners club magazine which often had tips on off-roading in a VW; straddle deep ruts with wheels on the centerline ridge and the edge of the road.
As an Aussie, I can confirm, this is typical "she'll be right mate, engineering !" LoL 😂
Because of our insane summer temperatures, 45⁰+C (113⁰F), air cooled VW's Beetles and Kombi vans, were very, very, popular here in the 60's and 70"s 👍😆
Love this video !
Cheers mate 🍺
As a CFS volounteer I put too many burning VWs out. They get hot and do all sorts of weird things. And then catch fire.
So many wobble heads [follows the engines] waffle crap about their inferior unsafe cars. May be just ok as a city commuter car,, though are actually ok on rough roads until something falls off,, and they catch fire. Not good in very hot conditions, not good in very cold conditions and very mediocre in between. Lovely swing axle suspension that cause wheel tuck and they roll over.
I had a couple of VW repairers local,, long weekend there would be a queu of broken Zombies outside on Tues morning
@@ldnwholesale8552 How many decades has it been since VW sold a vehicle with a swing axle or air cooled magnesium engine block ??? You must be in your 90's !! lol
@@ldnwholesale8552 They caught on fire most often from folks using incorrect fuel line. I can't tell you how many VW's I've worked on with the metal fuel line missing and the rubber routed right through the tin hole. Since they're easy to work on there were a lot of DIY'er who created time bombs (fire bombs?)
That makes no sense, because its air cooled driving in 45C+ temps would make it likely to overheat. in those high temps water cooling is better to keep an engine cool.
@@ennz69 Are you a bit ignorant of what 45C or 110+ degrees does to water cooled cars in traffic ??? LoL
I love my VW’s! I am rebuilding my 83 Vanagon diesel. And my daughter is inheriting her great grandmothers 67 beetle . I still enjoy wrenching on VW’s and there is still a strong culture of VW enthusiast that use their bugs as daily drivers to this very day.
15:51 - That is a pair of Atlas Copco Cobra 47LA gasoline powered rock drills. I have one. If you want another video idea these rock drills would be a good bet.
Bill Bernbach was an absolute genius.
His ads still stand up today
I had a 1963 Beetle in 1989, it cost me $1000 and i painted it yellow gold and deep indian red. When i took the front indicator off the lens had my birthday (DD/MM/YY) stamped inside it.
Having driven it as my only transport for two years I take my hat off to anyone who could win a rally in a 63.
Oh my, as a resident of lutrawita/ Trouwanna/ Tasmania, where the modern Australian Antarctic Division (aka Antdiv) is based, this is going to be a thrill. We're an island who feel very attached to Australian Antarctic research. Will definitely pass it on to my mates who either work there or are just Antdiv nutters. Thanks so much!!😍
Edit: Oh my, the Nella Dan. There's a sad and tragic tale 😢😢😢
Where is this in Tasmania?
Oh wow! Well I hope you (and they ) enjoy it!
@@Lazy_TimHobart
Oh a new calum vid? Guess it will be a good day.
haha well wait until you've seen it first, then you can judge!
@@CalumRaasaySeen it. Love it. Happily waiting for the next video.
Or evening, perfect for watching while i have my evening snack.
@@CalumRaasay Mate, if it can survive in the outback, Antarctica is going to bloody easy!!
EDIT: - Or maybe the cheeky bugger just wanted a free VW, after all, they're bloody reliable cars!!
The 4 1/4 Beetle might actually be somewhat preserved. Things that are extremely cold tend to decay less quickly even though it is in corrosive salt water.
Thank you Calum, I had no knowledge of ANARE sending VWs to Antarctica.
The VW marketing campaign of the time was run by DDB (Doyle Dane Bernbach): it was possibly *the* best advertising campaign for any car ever, including short films and a huge print media presence, all featuring a distinctly tongue-in-cheek theme. Dad had 5 Beetles over many years and loved them.
Calum, your work is sooo good. Your topics are always interesting and original. The stories are well written and researched, and the videos look fantastic. Just wanted to say thank you!
Thank you! Really appreciated!
In 1987, I purchased a Beetle as my second car, because I worked in delivery, and needed a reliable back up vehicle. My main car was a full size Jeep Cherokee Chief, with big, wide BF Goodrich all terrain A/T tires. Which worked great in snow. But one day, it broke down, and I had to use the beetle. No problem; mounted chains on the rear tires. I got stuck twice; just put the car in low gear, then got out and pushed it out, and ran to catch up with the un-stuck car rolling gently up the road. Nice, durable, light, easily pushed car. Just one thing; IT WAS FREEZING INSIDE! The windshield defroster only provided a 8" circle of clear 'porthole' view on the windshield, of the outside world. Zero visibility out the side or back windows, s they were glazed over with frost, even if scraped clean, they would quickly re frost up. So it was great, as long as you never came to an intersection, or had to turn. Perfect for Antarctica, I guess. But pretty bad for any inhabited lands with normal roads.
Nice to hear!
The beetle with the penguins is so surreal
Great video! It's the first time I heard about the Antarctic Beetles. I've owned a few of them, the last one a 1966 that I restored and sold a couple of years ago. They're so simple, reliable, and easy to maintain, and many of them remain in use in the Brazilian hinterland.
Go Australia, keep on being crazy. It's what we all love about you. What a shame that no one took care of the originals. Maybe Ground Penetrating Radar would be able to see if the original A1 is still buried.
I have to say, I really love these videos that cover kind of obscure but insanely interesting topics and this channel is probably the best at doing that!
Glad you enjoy it! Much appreciated 🙏
My dad owned one of these from 1966-71 in Melbourne. He always used to tell my brother and I about the map of Antarctica it had on the interior roof. Guessing it was Antarctica 1, as he always calls it "the first car in Antarctica".
He's recently started using TH-cam on his telly, so I'll tell him to watch this video and get back to me with more info.
Oh he should! Maybe he's the missing link to find more answers!
@@CalumRaasay he replied with this, but also said he will write up some more about his memories of the vehicle and anything you might be interested in.
"HZB624 - ANTARCTICA 1 BEETLE
Thanks for sharing this fascinating story. Yep, that was definitely my car which I bought at a Mentone car yard in 1967. I traded it in for a crappy HT Holden in 1971 when my first child was born and we couldn't fit her pram in the Beetle. I've absolutely no idea what happened to it after that."
Hey mate, would love to know more about the car. Am I able to email you?
VW's marketing must have worked. When I was stationed in Adak, Alaska I bought a 1966 VW from another sailor who was leaving the island. Along the timeline from 1966 to 1976 the engine had been upgraded to 1800cc, the rear fender openings had been enlarged to accommodate slightly larger and much wider traction tires on the rear (but the rear bumper remained), the front fender openings had also been enlarged but it had skinny front tires (much better in snow), the front end had been torched off so that the front tires stuck out in front of the body, and some big, goofy bugeye headlights had been bolted on top of what remained of the front fenders. Oh, and it was red, too. Nothing else was done and this car was amazing up there. It always started and it went anywhere and everywhere I asked it to go - on "road" and off. The roads weren't very good up there, but I did go out with the jeep club a couple of times and did not get stuck where some of them did.
as a 27 year old being a car mechanic it always brings me joy when one of our many customers drops bye to give their old beetle some love. we have 3 in the showroom in various states of original to restored and an array of buggy's convertibles and the normal ones in service 👌
My grandfather was in operation deep freeze us Navy in 60s and said there were a couple beetles in Antarctica
Amazing video, so well illustrated and presented. It just so happens I live in Seymour and right next to potentially one of the towns oldest local residents…. Next time I bump into him I will definitely bring this up and see if he knows anything. Thanks for the incredible content!
Amazing! Let me know if he remembers anything haha
Fantastic story and so excellently researched, narrated and presented (as always). Many thanks Callum.
My first car was a 1970 VW Beetle. It was a remarkably reliable vehicle. I abused it cruelly and it just kept on running. I even once sunk it in a river, pulled it out, drained the carburetor float bowl and after spitting water out of the exhaust pipes, started up and ran for a long time! Remarkable little car!
I think many often miss what makes the beetle shine. It's not that it's never going to breakdown, it's that when it does breakdown, you can fix it 5 minutes with a paperclip and your left shoe lace.
Truly excellent video. Far more in-depth and interesting than anything that would be made for television. Thank you!
every country: i made a giant vehicle that is powered by a diesel engine and it has tank treads.
australia: volkswagen beetle i choose you.
@ 10:05 Doyle Dane Bernbach ads, if I remember correctly. "We finally found a beautiful picture of a Volkswagen." Something like that.
What an epic story, great work! 👌
My first car in Mexico was a 1987 special edition 1600 with 4 drums and the (in)famous AF low-compression variant. My uni friends still remember,and they also remember their oaths to never set foot inside a car I'm driving. That car got me through places Jeeps wouldn't go, rainstorms that forced tractor trailers out of the road, meter-deep "puddles", and a few very close shaves where its light steering and almost electric-like torque at low revs saved my ass in the nutso MEX traffic. I hope it's still out there somewhere, now that I finally earn enough to look for it and restore it to its scary, ferocious glory.
Love these Antarctic stories, all of them~ Such extreme environments and we still find ways to conquer them with all sorts of vehicles.
Seeing a new Calum video is like that time my photography teacher in high-school in 1987 gave me a 59, 71 and a 77 Transporter. I had already bought a red 64 Bug from the school narc who used his photography equipment to take some great pictures of me and some friends smoking at band hall entrance from across the football field. So weird how everything is tied together. Even Antarctica is part of my life as my dad's been there many times and let me build my firsr engine, a 1776cc VW engine, in my bedroom which I painted while he was in Antarctica playing golf I mean working. 🐞
Edit: I completely forgot about the trip to Australia and New Zealand for a month in 87-88 where a sales guy in Sydney gave me full access to an overgrown VW dealership full of 50s up NOS parts of which I brough tmany back but the best part was the people I met in the car culture. Trip of dreams.
I loved my '69 (Beetle) Bug. It would go anywhere, sometimes where 4×4s got stuck!😅 It was the most reliable, the easiest to work on...
It just wasn't the safest; especially driving the freeways of LA!
Cheers from California!🥂
✌️🫶🌏☮️🕊
4*4 Vehicles got stuck and the bettle got anywhere sure
this channel finds the cololest stuff. can't believe there's so much footage and photos of those times.
Amazing video as always! If you really want to fall down an Arctic rabbit hole the roligon trucks have to be the strangest arctic vehicles still in use, I’d recommend checking them out
Ohhh! I'd forgotten that Beetles could float. It was a thing when I was a kid, barely old enough to begin understand, but I remember hearing of owners fitting a propeller to the crankshaft to make an amphibious vehicle. The other mod which obviously went with this was the cut-away rear, showing off the engine. For a while, I thought every Beetle with a cut-away rear had a propeller, but I was in no position to verify it as I hardly knew what a boat propeller looked like. ;)
I loved the video; thanks Calum! :)
All modern cars are built to float in water as a safety precaution...
Great Video as always Calum, I always look forward to your videos bc I learn something new. So thank you for all the time and effort you put into making this awesome content, you rock! 👍👍
Thank you! Much appreciated!
It’s 1962. The Beatles were in Hamburg. My E8 dad was stationed in Munich, Germany. I was the brat. The family lived in Perlacher Forst just outside Mcgraw. He bought a ’60 VW beetle as a grocery getter. Yes, that same car that Der Adolph had drawn on a napkin in a restaurant a mere 22 years earlier. It was that diaper without clorox beige, one of the four colors that beetles came from Wolfsburg. Couldn’t stand it! Being in charge of the motor pool he assigned some PFCs to prep it for paint after the jeeps. It got squirted BMW orange, or something like it. Everybody loved it.
Now, this was a problem, because both VW and BMW had HQ in Munich. The line of cars driving through Perlacher Forst to see this anomaly was endless and constant.
I think my dad started a revolution amongst car owners. A car could be snazzy without being a hot rod. What did VW’s look like in the 1970’s? Easter Eggs!
The stock mid 60s Beetles when new and un-modified had very functional heating systems. The additional gas heaters (yes available on Beetles) were really only needed to warm up the cabin prior to driving or in slow town driving. I drove a restored one just last winter in Iowa during a blizzard at 10F and had to turn down the heat at highway speeds. The legendary reputation for poor heat, and non-existent defrost comes largely from heat control mismanagement, unsealed front deck lid (leading to an icy gale through the dash), rusted out heater channels, and failed door gaskets; all common on well worn examples. Beetles kept running for YEARS after many of their constituent parts had completely failed! They’re ability to get through snow is only exceeded by a modern all-wheel-drive Subaru.
Have to agree, and It's sad the people blame the design when it's really poor maintenance and neglect. I have a 1970 Karmann Ghia right now, and a few years ago we had a very dry winter that allowed me to keep driving it into January. That year I'd use it to pickup my daughter from work at 4am, and even at below zero Fahrenheit temperatures, I was comfortable.
IDK, I've driven a lot of rot box pickups, with doors about to fall off and big enough holes in the floor to Flintstone it, that still had hot heat. Parked and in motion. If you have to drive highway speed to have good heat, that's a bad system.
To add to my previous comment, my Dad was a snow plow driver for the county and had a ‘74 Beetle himself which got him to his snow plow unfailing. My Beetle had a stuck heater vent on the passenger side floor. Many times when making regular trips from Memphis, TN to Detroit, MI I would wrap some seasoned ground beef in,foil and place it up against the heat vent. Halfway through my trip it would be cooked well,done so I had my dinner before I reached my destination! I miss that little car!
DDB ran a TV ad in the '60s that featured the snow plow driver scenario that you can easily find on TH-cam.
Obviously it was too hot to drive an air-cooled Beetle in Australia, so taking it to Antarctica was the only logical solution...
Congratulations Calum, your research efforts and your joy in the telling of this tale has resulted in the best TH-cam video that I`ve watched in a long , long time. Quite simply, SUPERB !
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks Ian!
I like the checker board in the top right just befor the advert lol, old school 😊 these details are what make your videos great 🎉
Plainly difficult does that too!
Haha glad you noticed it!
Had crack like that in my 68 started from hole where fuel line entered. Welded it up and plated. Good to go
Great story. Thank you. And good that you included Mark’s (Although sadly Mark passed away nearly 10 years ago.) beetle and how he and my dad used it.
To this day I wind my dad up about it. 😂
Thanks so much for a great wee doco. And you're concise and crisp - lovely style and pace. Nice research. '71 Fiat 850 coupe driver here, this story right up my alley.
Pouring a large one and getting comfortable.....this looks like another epic
Hope you enjoy!
Hey how come you don’t have a scaled down 1:18 Charkachanka in your room?
I have a 72 Beetle, I love them so much! They are the best vehicles ever made!
I’d LOVE to at least try one! Never even been in one!
@@CalumRaasay If you find yourself near Olympia Washington in the states, clue me in, and I'll show you around in the bug.
New Calum video dropped!!! You’re a blessing to my adhd hyperfixations!!
Keep it up man, I love your videos :DD
Hahaha scratching that particular niche history itch!
To be fair, the Porsche engines in the Sno-Tracs were old 4-cyl 90hp (max) ones out of a 356; sooohhh similar to a Beetle power plant 🤔 9:34
In Finland, veterinarians drove beetles because they had to get to remote farms during winter, even when the roads were not cleared of snow. Beetle was like a sled on snow.
Been dying for this since you first mentioned them in another Antarctic video!
Haha wow I know it’s been LONG overdue!
@@CalumRaasay I don’t care how long it takes so long as the content is awesome. Keep up the good work, and ship no wine before its time.
There’s nothing better than a Calum Antarctica video
I believe the 2 rather 1 6v batteries were put in parallel not series, so still made 6v but with twice the current.
Oops! That’ll be the correct one
@@CalumRaasayas a auto electrician they could be wired parallel (6V) for normal running but series (12V) for the starter motor.
What you refer to as the "exhaust manifold" at 7:25 is actually the intake manifold.
These are cool but no Antarctic Exploration vehicle will ever be as cool as the Mini-Trac!
Great video. VW beetle was my first car. The 4 1/4 looks like it had the smaller oval rear window.
Thanks for a great video.
It's unfortunate that VW Australia sold off the Antarctic beetles one after another and didn't think to keep at least one for posterity. Any one of them would be a nice specimen in a VW museum.
Absolutely brilliant. I've been waiting for a really good documentary on these bugs. I thought I had done some thorough researching on the subject myself, but man the footage and details you've found are incredible
You didn't mention the main reason why the Beetle was the ideal car, it was air-cooled, meaning there was no water to freeze.
That’s true!
That was an odd omission, all things considered - I guess he just has faith in his viewers' powers of deduction! Another point in favour of the Beetle in these conditions would have been the engine being at the back - not only more sheltered, but also putting the weight of the engine over the powered wheels.
But isn't that just about how much antifreeze you add to the mixture?
@@mikkoolavijarvinen3653 I don't live in a very cold country, but the antifreezes I've seen are effective down to around -30 ⁰C, perhaps in colder countries there are products that can withstand lower temperatures, but anyway, we're talking about the 60s, I don't know what kind of technology they had at the time.
@@mikkoolavijarvinen3653 antifreeze normally goes in water! Or do you mean something that's added to petrol to stop it freezing? Petrol freezes at about -60 - does it get that cold where that base is in Antarctica?
This is very good. Disclaimer: air-cooled VW fan here, having briefly enjoyed a '67 Type 1 and currently "owned" by a '43 Type 82 and '73 Type 181. You might want to delve into the story of the Beetle road trip in 1941, which started in Athens, Greece and ended in Kabul, Afghanistan. The adventure began on May 27th, 1941 and ended in Kabul about a month later. By then, Germany and Russia were at war and the convoy, which included the Beetle, a Kübelwagen and an Opel Blitz support truck, were destroyed on orders from Berlin. Read about this in a Petersen's publication which is buried somewhere at home and may be found again someday. Recall the article mentioned the Type 1 had a fresh-air vent on top of the front firewall which did not become standard on the factory models until 1968. Not trying to create more work for you, but if you were to "run with the story," wouldn't stop you either!🙂
They should have used a Saab 93 TTiD Linear
Thanks!
Thank you for watching! I'm so sorry, TH-cam never seems to show these super thanks to me.
I grew up hearing stories about what a terrible winter car those beatles supposedly were (mostly about the heater being weak and the air being oily) , and the Aussies took it to Antarctica, successfully. I guess they weren't THAT bad after all
Yeah I imagine it was a bit cold in there. You know who else was a massive Beetle fan though? RG LeRourneau, maker of the massive overland trains! He swore by them as being super reliable, go-anywhere little machines. Ironic.
The other aspect about the Beetle's heater, which is what I experienced firsthand: Carbon monoxide poisoning. The car uses a heat exchanger with the exhaust system to pipe-in warm air into the vehicle. If there's a leak with the heat-exchanger that is suppose to funnel fresh-air, that piped-in warm air would contain carbon monoxide.
Many small cars of the 1950s and even perhaps into the early 60s only had heaters as optional extras. The Beetle heater was a standard fitting - including separate outlets for rear seat passengers (luxury!) - and was efficient until pipework or channels which the air was blown through deteriorated with age or rust. You could get oil smells through the heater in early models but redesigned heat exchangers in the early 60s (I forget which year) cured that problem.
The pic with a mustache man in a tuxedo and boots with the bug is fantastic
Crazy, considering how unreliable some of the later models turned out to be.
Even after all my years being interested in this, I've still never sat in a beetle, either the classic or modern versions!
@@CalumRaasay You haven't missed much.
@@phlodel as a car, it's "an" car. it goes, sorta. it stops, kinda. but, as an icon, the beetle is one of the most influential cars ever made. james may did a "cars of the people" show, and he highlighted the most iconic and "meaningful" cars, the beetle being one of them. the original morris mini cooper was another. cars that meant more than what they actually were. im a vw enthusiast, but my interests are primarily in the water-cooled realm, golfs, jettas, etc. but it's still fun seeing a properly built little beetle scooting around.
the "new" beetle, and the current iteration, are based on a golf/jetta platform. the first new beetle was using the setups out of the mk4 golf and jetta era, and they were incredibly horrible to work on. if you had to replace the computer, you had to first pull the windshield. terrible packaging. the newest generation is based off of the mk5/6/7 setups, and are much more reliable and economical, and MUCH better looking.
The "later models" that you talk about are just golfs with different body panels. Water cooled, front engine and nothing to do with the original beetle.
What an absolutely amazing story! I love car history and I’ve honestly never heard of this. Phenomenal job on this man and your quality level is outstanding!
Awesome job with your videos Sir. Great topics, nicely presented and you can tell you’re passionate about them. What a combo 🥳
Thank you from Poznań, Poland 🇵🇱🫡
Much appreciated!
7:20 fun fact! the little 1300 badge on the decklid is a 1966 only feature!
I know, I was thinking the VW fans would be able to spot that my models weren't exactly correct pretty quick!
In Australia that was a 2 year feature. We had them on the 66, then in late 66 through 67 it had deluxe badge under the 1300 as well.
@calumraasay 7:25 I'm afraid that would be the intake manifold, not exhaust :)
Oops!
I am flattend by the depth of the research to find clues like the advert of the seller in an old newspaper. Great work, keep that up.
Amazing presentation, totally enjoyed it. My brother had a beetle back in the 80‘s. Always started and ran flawlessly however, she loved to drink - thirsty girl that beetle.
Great vid. Thanks. Love your documentaries. Research is thorough and second to none. Watch anything u put out.
I appreciate that!
Wish I had something interesting to add on the subject, rather I just wanna say how stoked I am every time you pop up in my subscriptions. Always thought of beetles as the goofy little cars and this has really made me appreciate them a lot more.
What a wonderful piece of history! Well done!
Very interesting documentary and thanks for not having background music
Came across your channel when it was recommended by Found and Explained. Haven't been able to stop watching since. Great content, definitely earned my sub.
Calum, this is bloody fascinating and thankyou for the work you have put in here. l had no idea about these VWs in the Antarctic but goes to show how good they were. We had a couple of Veedub (as they were called here in Aust) station wagons when l was a kid in the 1970s and they never let us down. German cars and bikes with the horizontally opposed air cooled motors are seriously over-engineered and that's great - l have a 1982 model BMW motorbike still going that l've owned for nearly 40 years and have always done all work on it myself. l have no idea how many 100,000s of km it has done because the odometer ceased working many years ago but up until recently l was commuting 400km a week for nearly 10 years. They really do run underwater.