But the changes could also anger fans, who love the little four-seater for its huggable curves and perky attitude.
“I hope they keep the fun in the car, and all the round angles,’’ said Howie Lipton, who owns a computer repair business in Hamilton, Ontario, and helps organize an annual New Beetle show in Roswell, N.M.
Lipton was hoping VW would update the spare interior, and his wish has been granted. VW’s lead Beetle project manager for the United States, Andres Valbuena, said the 2012 model will have a navigation system, a significantly larger trunk, more luxurious materials, and ambient lighting.
“It ties in more with our other products. It’s more upscale,’’ Valbuena says. The 2012 Beetle goes on sale this fall. VW won’t yet say how much it costs.
The design is based not on the New Beetle but on the original Beetle, which was created in Nazi Germany in the 1930s, came to the United States after World War II, and became a counterculture favorite because of its low cost and unusual look.
It was the antithesis of the land yachts being churned out in Detroit, and baby boomers loved it. In 1968, a Beetle with a mind of its own, Herbie, starred opposite Dean Jones in the hit Disney movie “The Love Bug.’’
But sales slowed as VW faced tough competition in the small-car segment from Japanese and US automakers and money problems back in Germany. US sales of the original Beetle peaked at 200,000 in 1962. VW stopped selling the car in the United States in 1979.
In 1998, the company introduced the New Beetle, an overhaul of the original that became a huge hit. For a time, the Beetle was outselling such stalwarts as the Ford Focus and Chevrolet Impala. When a convertible version was released in 2003, US sales rose to almost 93,000.
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