1973 Volkswagen Thing �€" White with Black Top, Removable Doors,
Fold-Down Windshield Why This Car Is Special The 1973 Volkswagen
Thing is one of the more honest vehicles ever sold to the American
public. It does not pretend to be anything other than what it is: a
simple, open-air, go-anywhere machine with military roots and
absolutely zero pretense. VW sold the Type 181 �€" that is its
official designation �€" in the United States for just three model
years, from 1973 through 1975, and the car developed a devoted
following almost immediately. This particular 1973 Volkswagen Thing
presents in white with a black convertible top, black vinyl
interior, and whitewall tires on steel wheels with hubcaps. It is a
correct, characterful example of a vehicle that is genuinely scarce
and getting harder to find in solid condition. The Thing traces its
lineage directly to a West German military vehicle called the
Mehrzweckfahrzeug, or multi-purpose vehicle, which Volkswagen
produced through the 1960s for the Bundeswehr. When VW decided to
bring a civilian version to market in 1969, they used the same
basic concept �€" flat body panels, removable components,
air-cooled mechanicals �€" and sold it first in Mexico and Europe
before finally bringing it stateside in 1973. U.S. regulations
actually forced VW to add safety bumpers and side marker lights for
American-market cars, which gives 1973�€"1975 Things their slightly
beefier look compared to European examples. The name 'Thing' was
coined specifically for American buyers because Volkswagen's
marketing team decided the car was simply too strange to describe
otherwise. They were not wrong. Fewer than 25,000 Things were sold
in the United States across the entire three-year run, making any
well-preserved survivor worth paying attention to. The VIN on this
car confirms it is a 1973 model year U.S.-specification vehicle,
built at VW's Emden, Germany plant. The 'E' suffix in the VIN
encodes the 1973 model year, consistent with German-market Type 181
production records. Features List - 1.6L Air-Cooled Flat-4 Engine -
4-Speed Manual Transmission - Rear-Mounted Engine - Removable Black
Convertible Soft Top - Fold-Down Windshield - Removable Doors -
Black Vinyl Interior - Whitewall Tires - Steel Wheels with Hubcaps
- Undercoated Floorpan - Dual Exhaust Tips - White Exterior
Mechanical The 1973 Volkswagen Thing runs the same 1.6-liter
air-cooled flat-four engine that powered generations of VW
products, including the Beetle and the Bus. In U.S. trim for 1973,
this engine produced approximately 46 horsepower, which is modest
by any measure but entirely appropriate for a vehicle that weighs
just over 1,800 pounds. The engine sits in the rear of the car,
driving the rear wheels through a 4-speed manual gearbox �€" a
layout VW used across its entire lineup during this era and one
that the company had refined over decades of production. Because
the engine is air-cooled, there is no radiator, no coolant, and no
water pump to worry about. The simplicity of this drivetrain is a
genuine advantage for ownership and maintenance. Parts remain
widely available through the VW air-cooled community, and any
mechanic familiar with vintage VW Beetles can work on a Thing
without having to source exotic components. The rear engine lid
opens to give full access to the motor, and the photos here show
the characteristic yellow-painted engine bay that was standard on
the Type 181. The dual exhaust tips exit below the rear bumper, a
visual signature of the model. The floorpan on this car has been
undercoated, which is an important detail on any vintage Thing. The
flat, stamped-steel floor is the first place these vehicles
typically show age, and a properly undercoated pan significantly
extends the useful life of the chassis. The underside photos show
solid, black-coated suspension components and floor sections, which
is encouraging on a 50-year-old open-air vehicle. Interior The
interior of this 1973 Volkswagen
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