Lot Ended
Description
1972 VW Beetle GT
Running and driving special
edition Beetle; 1600cc engine; rare model with nice extras; showing just 73,000
miles
'Hot Property' says the GT Beetle brochure - 'A very special
Beetle at a very special price'.
It carries on....
'The GT Beetle
is a 1300 Beetle with extras. It costs £19 more, £997 instead of
£978.
What are the extras?
Well for a start it has a 1600cc engine
instead of a 1300cc. Which gives you 60bhp at 4000rpm instead of 52bhp at
4100rpm.
81.7ft lbs at 3000rpm, against 68.7ft lbs at 3500rpm. Plus a lot
more oomph through the gears.
To cope with this extra urge we've put disc
brakes up front instead of standard drums.
The next goody we come to
(there are ten in all) is another frankly expensive item: special wheels. We
confess they don't go any better than our standard wheels. They merely
distinguish the GT Beetle as a breed apart. Particularly as we've fitted them
with radial tyres.
Extra number 5 is really three items: three fruity
special colours, tomato red, lemon yellow and apple green. No printing inks do
them justice.
Sixth on our list (are you mentally totting up the value?)
is a new rear light cluster: 80 square inches of winker, stop light and
reflector.
Inside the car we've cloth upholstery. It's warm in winter,
cool in summer. It won't shine your suit. Or take the creases out of your
jeans.
There's also a non-reflective, matt black padded
dashboard.
A tunnel tray which helps keep all your bits and bobs in one
place.
And a sports gearshift which is your link with what Car Magazine
called "a smooth featherweight gear change of legendary accuracy".
That's
it for 19 quid. Now why so much for so little? Well on December 15th the
300,000th Beetle arrives in Britain. And to celebrate we've built a limited
number of GT Beetles which we're selling at this give-away price.'
So
went the brochure - which sums up what you got rather nicely we
thought.
Now this GT Beetle (as referenced on the V5C) comes in
Tomato Red and is known as 'Cecil'. The special steel wheels which were
originally on the vehicle were replaced with alloys - probably in the
late 90’s. The front and fear wings have been replaced at some point with fibre glass ones
but the interior is in good condition and rear seat belts have been
fitted as an additional safety
feature.
The carpet set has been replaced
recently and the dark blue velour seats and door cards were in the car when the
current owner purchased it in 2016. The original door cards and seats would have
been Beige in colour.
The badge on the back says 1300 S which confuses,
but the GT Badge was a dealer fit accessory and came as 1300 S unless specified
at time of purchase. Just below the passenger window is a rivet which was to
determine that it was a GT model as it went down the production line,
which is present. The
car has a radio/cassette
player.
Cecil has had six
owners since 1973 and comes with its handbook. The spare wheel
is probably original, under the bonnet. The car has had many new parts over
recent years including invoices for a new clutch in 2020,
Bosch Battery, brake hoses, gearbox mounts, valve cover gasket, rear wheel
cylinders and rear brake strip in 2020, new
front shocks, luggage compartment liner, fuel tank, fan belt, fuel cap
and ignition leads. The Beetle has benefitted
from frequent oil services regardless of the few miles added.
There are
various invoices going back to 2007 and previous MOT
certificates going back to 1987.
It appears a good honest car. The bodywork would
benefit from some attention, but it is a great classic Beetle and a
particularly interesting model to own. A bit of diligent
searching for the correct seats, wheels and of course the badge would deliver a
most desirable Beetle and would be well worth the effort
involved.
For more information - contact nigel.mainard@brightwells.com
* All charges are subject to VAT