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2016 Volkswagen Beetle Dune Drive Far From Baja First Drive Review
Volkswagen wants all of us to remember the good ol’ days. You know, any time prior to September 2015, when the EPA dropped its NOx-hammer on the company’s dirty-breathing diesels. If you can’t bring yourself to forgive and forget so readily, VW is happy to guide you further down memory lane to the 1960s, when the pollution was hazier and the love flowed freely. After the Microbus-inspired BUDD-e concept—an all-electric mea culpa—VW appears eager to tap the nostalgia ATM again with this new Beetle Dune.
The Beetle Dune, a midrange trim level in special-edition guise, is meant to evoke Baja Bugs. Those modified Type 1 Beetles, created in the image of the Meyers Manx, could be anything from a recreational dune buggy to a bona fide desert racer. While there wasn’t a single blueprint, a Baja Bug was instantly recognizable by the trimmed-back bodywork and swollen tires.
Of course, there’s a reason the throwback is called Beetle Dune and not Beetle Baja. Actually, two reasons: Compared with standard Beetles, the Dune’s track grows 0.6 inch wider (the result of wheels with a smaller offset) and its suspension lifts the floor 0.4 inch higher. That’s the extent of the Dune’s mechanical changes. Beaches will not be invaded, sand dunes will not be crested, and deserts will not be skimmed.We deviated from VW’s prescribed pavement-only route in our Dune, driving down a gravelly access road and making it 50 yards before a drainage gully threatened to tear off the front fascia. While the Dune’s front and rear clips give the false impression that the car is equipped with skid plates, we resisted the temptation to call Volkswagen’s bluff.
The Dune is a car playing dress-up and angling for a starring role in Mad Max: Sesame Street. It will sell on its black wheel-arch extensions and the long, flat spoiler that appears to be inspired by that other rear-engined German icon. The Dune follows the same insincere formula that turns an Audi wagon into an Allroad or a Volvo wagon into a Cross Country—only without all-wheel drive. It exists because we live in a time when automakers believe everything can and should be a crossover.
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