Mine has been very safe. So have my motorcycles and bicycles. It is other people who are unsafe. I'm still watching out for them any time I'm on the road.Zombie Master wrote: BTW the bug was really bad. Reliable and cheap, but unsafe.
Chuey
Mine has been very safe. So have my motorcycles and bicycles. It is other people who are unsafe. I'm still watching out for them any time I'm on the road.Zombie Master wrote: BTW the bug was really bad. Reliable and cheap, but unsafe.
Excellent point. Thing is, sometimes I feel safer on the motorcycle as far as my vulnerability to other vehicles/drivers. The narrowness, quick acceleration and nimbleness of the bike, in some situations, would be safer than a slow car.Native /5 wrote: Are they unsafer than a motorcycle?
Clemson! do you have a pair of jeans with the tiger on the back pocket?Jean wrote:ZM, I don't know where YOU live but a LOT of my non-white fellow workers around here drive really OLD VWs and would probably take offence at your comment...maybe you ought to go back to the speakeasy.
Oh, back in 1969...the non-white guy who worked on my '61 190D had a brother who rode an R69s...it was the only one in Clemson at the time. I wish I knew what happened to it.
Depends on the age of the bug, and, I suppose, the age of the motorcycle. All the 4-wheel vehicles from the early years of the bug are ones you wouldn't want to be in a serious accident in, but that applies to all motorcycles too. To me, the only real consistent safety weakness in the early bugs is the brakes. On the other hand, the handling is far superior to most of its U.S. contemporaries.Native /5 wrote: Are they unsafer than a motorcycle?
When I was bugged, I lived in Vancouver BC, getting the windshield clear of moisture was a real PIA. I was always 10 minutes to where I had to be, and could never see out that dam windshield! Armed with a rag I felt like a weeping cream pie! Gas heater (pop pop)? Forget about it. I guess those features aren't that important down in the barrios.Chuey wrote:Mine has been very safe. So have my motorcycles and bicycles. It is other people who are unsafe. I'm still watching out for them any time I'm on the road.Zombie Master wrote: BTW the bug was really bad. Reliable and cheap, but unsafe.
Chuey
Okay, I'm tempted to add the crappy heater to the brakes, but, in my experience, the heaters are usually in need of heat exchanger/ducting repair. I'm not sure if I've ever experienced an early Bug with the heater in proper repair (at least, while old enough to remember it), so I'm not sure how well they might work when working correctly. Certainly they were a problem in my high school years in Tahoe (where having no defroster is a real problem), but that was mostly 10 - 15 year-old bugs driven on salty roads their whole lives now in the hands of high schoolers who hadn't the money or concern for such details as heater repair.Zombie Master wrote: When I was bugged, I lived in Vancouver BC, getting the windshield clear of moisture was a real PIA. I was always 10 minutes to where I had to be, and could never see out that dam windshield! Armed with a rag I felt like a weeping cream pie! Gas heater (pop pop)? Forget about it. I guess those features aren't that important down in the barrios.