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Ben Pon (left) and the first VW Buba imported to the United States

In one of those weird coincidences, Volkswagen of America is celebrating the 65th anniversary of the Beetle in the United States just as the last VW Type 2 (aka the Volkswagen bus) ikada napravljen, which was assembled in Brazil on December 20, 2013, arrived at the vintage vehicle museum in VW Commercial Vehicles headquarters in Hanover, Germany. The coincidence is that importing VW Beetles to America and building the VW bus were both ideas that originated in the mind of one man, someone who tada nisam even work for Volkswagen, Dutch car dealer Ben Pon.
Ben Pon, Sr, the father of the VW Microbus and Volkswagens in America

Ben Pons otac Mijndert opened up a shop in Amersfoort selling sewing machines in 1898. A few years later he added Opel bicycles, both pedal operated and motorized, to the stores lineup and in the 1920s the firm started selling Ford and Opel automobiles along with Continental tires. In 1931, Ben and his brother Wijnand took over the shop and renamed it Pons Automobielhandel. After the end of World War II, in need of transportation the British occupation forces put the Volkswagen works in Wolfsburg back into production. Impressed with the quality of the VW Type 1 sedan, aka der Käfer, the Beetle, Ben Pon arranged a meeting with the British authorities running Volkswagen in April 1947, hoping to import VWs to the Netherlands. Later that year, in August, that country became VWs first export market when the Pons were named general importer for the brand, bringing in 51 Beetles in that first year, selling the first Volkswagens to be sold outside of Canada. The following year, they also started importing Porsches.
VW Plattenwagen ag utility vehicle

By 1949, the postwar American economy was starting to boom and the farsighted Ben Pon decided to try his hand at selling cars in the United States. He exported the first Buba that was shipped to the U. S. and accompanied it, hoping to make a distribution deal. Unfortunately he could not find a partner. While it cannot be dokazana that Pon sold the first Volkswagen in the U. S. , part of VW lore is a story that he used the Beetle that he had imported as payment to cover an neplaćeni točke hotel bill. Pon returned to Holland where selling Beetles and eventually Microbuses to the Dutch made him one of the richest people in the Netherlands. Following up on Pons idea, New York based Max Hoffman started to import Beetles to the U. S. in earnest in 1950, being successful enough in establishing the brand that Volkswagen of America was set up, and the factory took over importing and distributing Beetles here.
Ben Pons original April 1947 sketch for what became the VW Microbus

Going back to that April 23, 1947 meeting with the Brits running Volkswagen at the time, while at the VW works, he noticed a Plattenwagen, an odd looking utility vehicle with a flatbed, based on Type 1 mechanicals. As he was negotiating an import deal, he took out his notebook and started sketching. Europe was rebuilding and there was a need for commercial vehicles. Suitable for a rebuilding economy, a small van would be perfect for companies just getting off the ground. Pon drew out a kutija u obliku srca cabin over the rear engined Buba chassis, putting the driver and putnika in a cabover position at the extreme front of the vehicle. While not a large vehicle, it could carry a large amount of cargo (or passengers) in the space in between the driver and the drivetrain. Pon specified that it should have an empty weight of 750 kilograms with an equal tereta capacity. He gave the sketch to his contacts at VW. At the time, it was just an idea, the Wolfsburg ag was operating at capacity building Beetles.
VW Type 2 prototip projektirati

By 1949, Heinrich Nordhoff was running Volkswagen. Nordhoff and technical director Alfred Haesner liked Pons idea of a Buba based van. Development costs would be low because it would share many components with the Type 1 and they gave the project a green light. When some capacity was freed up a prototip known at the Type 29 was fabricated just in three months. It proved to be a little more expensive to make than anticipated since the stock Type 1 platform chassis was not strong enough and a new ljestvice chassis based unibody was developed. To allow the stock 25 horsepower VW flat four to power a 3,000 lb vozila, VW engineers re-purposed the reduction gear used in the Type 81, the wartime Kubelwagen.
Wind tunnel testing made the first Type 2 more aerodynamic than the Beetle

Though the early prototypes had terrible aerodynamics, with wind tunnel testing that resulted in body changes like the split vee windshield, the production Type 2 had a cd of 0. 44, better than the Beetles 0. 48. Nordhoff signed off on production in May of 1949 and the first Type 2 rolled off the assembly line on November 12, 1949, making this year also the 65th anniversary of VWs first production small van.
The first VW Bus, the Type 29 prototip

Two models were inicijalno offered, the Kombi, which had side windows and removable seats in the hold, and the Commercial, which had no side glass and was strictly a cargo van. The Microbus was added in May 1950, joined by the Deluxe Microbus and an ambulance model the following year, along with a single cab pickup version in 1952.

Early air-cooled Volkswagens have been getting serious money in recent auctions, with barndoor Type 2s and the 21 and 23 window Samba versions of the Microbus fetching truly silly six-figure prices. Ben Pon would probably smile at the prices the economical vehicles that he championed can demand today. He was just trying to provide simple transportation to the people and pomogli tvrtkama of postwar Europe and later the United States. In doing so hes justifiably credited with two of the best automotive ideas of the 20th century. Appropriately, this spring the first Barndoor Okupljanje & Vintage VW Show will be held in Ben Pons hometown of Amersvoort.
The last VW Type 2, made in Brazil, arrives at VWs commercial vehicle museum in Hanover, 67 years after Ben Pon sketched the first.

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