
The thirst thing was to get an automatic gearbox chassis. After
this we went to the local metal store to buy some iron for the
chassis. After some searching at other buggy's we made the dissision
to mould some disk brakes at the front and at the rear also
the VW van gearbox had to be fixed in. So we had fix the 181
suspension to the beetle chassis.
So we started with the chassis to lift the buggy body 5 cm
at the front and rear 8 cm and we replaced the rear beetle axle
for the IRS suspention with CV joints from a VW181.
Everything is painted, and the alum. floor panels can be fixed
with glue, to reduce weight and it looks great!. The bottom
of the chassis is flat as possible and gives down force on road
driving.....yeah right...?

The front and rear axlel are now ready with disk-breaksBrake
lines are fitted in and a cutting brake is mounted. We can use
this cutting break to steer with the rear wheels in the sand.
The gear boxes we used are from a 1972 T2 bus/van.
The difficaltie about this gear boxes is that you had the moulding
hand made. After this we noticed that the drive axles are to
long so we had to fix 181 drive shafts wit also 181 cv joints.
This cv joints can make a bigger angle than the beetle joints.
The bus gearbox mounting is home made with ford joints

This engine came from a Ford taunus 1980 an is
a 2.4 liter. I bought the engine from the scrap yard. With a
little work on the engine it was ready to fit in the buggyand
removed the engine.
Next winter we build the new front window frame,
roll-bar.
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