zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Culture
/
I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection
I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection-May 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:13:00

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

I was in Puebla, Mexico recently to help Volkswagen out building the last of the Beetles (more on that soon), and while I was there I finally found something I’d long suspected existed, but have never seen: Volkswagen of Mexico’s heritage collection. Over in Wolfsburg, VW has a massive as well as an not technically affiliated with the company. VW de Mexico must have some kind of collection, right? I’d never heard anything about it officially, but, finally, on this trip to Puebla, I got to see it.

It’s not that impressive, if I’m brutally honest. I mean, there’s some very cool stuff in there, and I’m delighted I got a chance to finally see it, but I’m sort of baffled by what I think are some pretty crucial omissions.

For example, why doesn’t VW de Mexico have any in their collection? Green-and-white (later marron-and-gold) Beetle taxis were once the dominant cab in Mexico city, crawling all over the place, and they’ve been gone since 2012. VW de Mexico should have at least one of these!

There’s also interesting and weird prototypes that they should have, like the one-off long-passenger door taxi prototype?

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Where’s that thing? It should be in their collection!

Now, I don’t want to disparage the collection too much—they do have some interesting cars, no question, and I’m happy they have a collection at all. They don’t really go out of their way to show much of it, so join me, if you would, on this rare opportunity to see the fun things Volkswagen of Mexico has socked away!

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

I do like that a number of cars in their heritage collection are still put to work, like their series of open-topped Type 2 buses, which are used to ferry groups of visitors around the factory.

As you can tell by the black face mask, these Buses are the final Type 2 iteration, using inline-4 water-cooled engines, which, of course, necessitated that tacked-on radiator.

Considering how much of an afterthought the water-cooling setup was, I don’t think they actually look all that bad, really. Plus, these make you realize how wonderful the concept of an open-topped van really is, even if the mechanics and logistics of a folding roof that size are, um, non-trivial.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

All of the open-topped buses are named “Hannibal” because I think somehow people were reminded of Hannibal riding elephants over the Alps in these things? I think there were five of these total.

Volkswagen Mexico didn’t start production until 1967, so there aren’t any Mexican Beetles older than that. Even so, the factory’s collection does include one very lovely 1955 specimen, in effectively perfect condition.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

This is a nice year for Beetles because it’s got lots of nice details: oval window, semaphores, and, best of all, the fairly rare heart-lens taillights:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

I know it looks pretty opaque, but that’s actually a dark red brake light lens there. It also has a nice plaque:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

The collection also boasts some important milestone Beetles, like a 20 Millionth commemorative edition Beetle and one of the Última Edición Beetles, the very last series they made in 2003.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

The 20 Millionth edition commemorates, as you’d guess, that VW had built 20 million Beetles, making it the most-produced car ever, beating out the Ford Model T. The commemoration part took the form of a badge:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

...and a houndstooth interior that had exactly 20 million hound’s teeth:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

I made that part up. I don’t think anyone counted the teeth there. Also, those may just be checkers, not hound’s teeth, too?

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

The Última Edición, though, that’s the one that really excited me, because it’s the newest possible air-cooled Beetle I could potentially drive, and I desperately wanted to try something so familiar yet in so much better condition than what I’m used to. Thankfully, VW let me take it for a quick spin!

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Starting a “new” air-cooled Beetle is interesting, because VW was using this odd immobilizer system. The car will crank but not start if you just turn the key; to get the ignition system actually active, you have to rub that little red pill-looking thing under the steering column, where I think it magnetically sets a switch to let the car turn on.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

And, once the car does turn on, there’s more surprises. For a Beetle, it’s shockingly quiet. I’m not sure why, but I think it may be a combination of hydraulic valves (no adjusting!) and that bumpy-textured coating in the engine compartment that must have good sound-deadening properties.

The fuel-injected engine was also interesting, starting easy and being remarkably smooth. Seeing that modern-looking oil fill cap in that familiar engine compartment is pretty strange, too.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Driving this thing was a treat; the thick wheel from an early ‘90s Jetta or Golf felt odd but not unpleasant, and the car drove and felt unmistakably like a Beetle, but everything was smooth and easy and just worked, because it hadn’t been whipped around and abused for four decades. This is probably as close as I can get to driving a new air-cooled Beetle, and I thought it was great.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Oh, one other 2003 Beetle surprise—even though these are even pretty stripped down compared to old US-spec Beetles (no flow-through ventilation or center defroster vent or rear seat heat, etc) there have been some improvements, like an actual pump-actuated windshield washer system, as opposed to the wonderful and weird

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

They also let me drive this lovely old Type 181 Thing (in Mexico, they called it the Safari) around. It was wonderful, in that clunky, crude Thing way. All Things that came to America were built here in Puebla.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

All of these cars came from Volkswagen de Mexico’s small, unpublicized collection, which they keep in a warehouse at the factory. It’s not much, but it does have a more accessible related collection I’ll get to soon. First, let me show you what I think is the jewel of their little collection:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

A Brasilia! This was a car , and was the only really successful Beetle replacement built on the air-cooled VW chassis. Underneath all you see, it’s really just a Beetle, with the same basic upright-fan Type I engine out back. Two-door versions of these (like this one) were built in the Puebla factory alongside the ones built in Brazil.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Of course, the Brasilia has a much more modern (think 1970s instead of 1930s) body style, and, like its bigger Type 3 and Type 4 siblings, is a marvel of clever packaging.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

In addition to the good-sized (if a bit high) cargo area under the hatch, the Brasilia also had a pretty roomy front trunk:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Engine access was tight, but VW used a flatter fan shroud and the Ghia/Bus-type offset air cleaner to keep the height as low as they could:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

It’s a very tidy, cool little car. They made over a million of these things.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There’s weirder stuff in the collection, too. Like this sort-of Harlequin Beetle, stretched and chopped into a convertible. VW made a lot of these factory tour-type cars. It makes sense, because the factory campus is massive, with multiple lakes and, surprisingly, even a facility where they breed their own guard dogs.

Hearing the tour guide describe that part was amazing because she called dog treats “dog treasures” which just makes everything so much more exciting.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There was an example of one of the Carat editions of the water-cooled Type 2s, and it was pretty amazing to see how cushy these things became. Look at all this velour!

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

...and this dashboard just feels so strangely modern for what is still, essentially, a ‘70s-style Microbus:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Of course, water-cooled cars have been the majority of VW de Mexico’s output for decades now, so of course they had some early examples of those, like this Corsar, which we knew as a Passat, and which still is all over China as the Santana.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

This was also a very interesting and unfamiliar (to us Americans, at least) car: the Caribe Pro.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

It was a Mk 1 Golf/Rabbit, and looks and feels a bit like a GTI, which it was, sort of. Mexico had their own GTI version, the Caribe GT, and the Caribe Pro was a sort of cheaper version of that.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

I didn’t get a good shot in the museum, but these Caribe Pros had a very cool set of rectangular driving lights inset into the grille.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There’s actually more, and more varied cars, in VW de Mexico’s collection, but it’s sort of shared with the city of Puebla in their small but nicely-executed automobile museum.

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There’s cars directly from VW’s collection in the museum, like this 21 millionth Beetle, and some interesting artifacts like that strange used in videos and advertising a few years back:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There’s also a decent Audi-related collection, like this lovely Audi Coupe S, back from the era when Audi wanted to build AMC Marlins:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There’s also some great Auto Union-era cars, like this Audi Front 225 Roadster:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

...and some friendly little DKWs, like this DKW 1000:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

There’s some even earlier, pre-Auto Union DKWs like this crisp little Weymann-bodied one:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

Especially exciting to see was the 2000 Audi Rosemeyer concept, which married design elements of J Mays-era Audi with the drama and proportions of the old Auto Union Silver Arrow racing cars:

Image for article titled I Finally Got to See Volkswagen of Mexico's Secret Car Collection

It’s a very powerful car to see in person. This is what the next R8 should look like.

It’s not the biggest or most impressive automaker collection, but VW already has such a massive collection in Wolfsburg that it doesn’t really have to be. Still, there’s some interesting stuff, and I’m excited I got to finally see what they were hiding.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Culture
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
Watch ABS Fail When MotorWeek Tests A 1997 Chevy S-10
MotorWeek’s is some of the on the internet. The long-running automotive news magazine has a treasure trove of tests after being on the air for over 40 years. Where else can you find detailed instrumented testing of long-forgotten cars like the or a ? MotorWeek’s recent Retro Review upload is...
May 5, 2025
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
Toyota Is Moving A Prewar 700-Ton Press Machine Halfway Around The World
closed its São Bernardo Plant in November 2023, marking the end of its first overseas production facility. The closure caps off a period of continuous car production in São Paolo, , lasting over 60 years. The plant was home to a Komatsu 700-ton press that predates itself. And now...
May 5, 2025
Subaru Had It Right All Along
Subaru Had It Right All Along
When first came to the United States, it sold small funky cars that were decidedly un-American. As the company grew its own identity and became more established in the U.S., it became the first automaker to offer an all-wheel-drive passenger car in 1975. Subaru was also an early-adopter of...
May 5, 2025
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I Can't Get Enough Of This YouTuber Who Builds Tiny, Fully Functional Scale-Model Cars
I love tiny, of . I have a that is roughly half the size of a normal cat, and she’s perfect. I own a 2013 , which is like the miniature version of a normal-sized vehicle (at least here in Texas) — but beyond that, I also own a Hot...
May 5, 2025
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I Entered My Lifted Miata In A Real Off-Road Race, Here's What Happened
I have two automotive loves: The first is the Miata, the second is off-road racing. For a while I raced air-cooled Volkswagens in the deserts of California and Nevada and I was lucky enough to co-drive in a class 11 stock bug in the Baja 1000 a few years...
May 5, 2025
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
2024 Kia EV9: What Do You Want To Know?
At long last, we are about to get behind the wheel of for the first time. Sure, , and sure, , and sure , but hey — what can you do? Anyway, before we get behind the wheel of this three-row electric beast, we want to know what you...
May 5, 2025
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved