1976 Volkswagen Super Beetle Convertible �€" Karmann Cabrio in Red
with Black Soft Top Why This Car Is Special The 1976 Volkswagen
Super Beetle Convertible is one of the most collectible variants of
the entire Beetle lineup, and for good reason. By 1976, Volkswagen
had already ended production of the standard Beetle sedan in
Germany, but the convertible �€" hand-built by coachbuilder Karmann
in Osnabrück �€" was kept alive specifically for markets like the
United States, where demand remained strong. That decision to
continue the Karmann Cabrio while killing the hardtop actually
makes the 1976 model year a meaningful one for collectors. These
cars were never cheap to produce. Karmann reinforced the body to
compensate for the loss of the roof structure, and the conversion
process was labor-intensive enough that the convertible carried a
significant price premium over the standard sedan when new. The
Super Beetle designation itself is important context. Introduced in
1971, the Super Beetle �€" known internally as the Type 1302 and
later the 1303 �€" differed from the standard Beetle in two key
ways: it used MacPherson strut front suspension instead of the old
kingpin-and-torsion-bar setup, and it featured a larger, more
curved windshield that gave the front of the car a rounder, more
modern profile. The curved windshield also expanded interior volume
noticeably compared to the flat-glass standard Beetle. By 1976,
Volkswagen had settled on the 1303-based platform for the Cabrio,
which meant buyers got improved handling geometry and more front
storage space along with the open-air body style. Karmann had been
building VW convertibles since 1949, and by the time this car
rolled out of the Osnabrück plant, the company had decades of
experience reinforcing the unibody and fitting convertible tops
that held up well in real-world use. The result was a car with
notably less cowl shake than most open-top vehicles of the era, a
point VW's own marketing leaned on. The fact that Karmann continued
producing the Beetle Cabrio all the way through 1980 �€" well after
the Golf had taken over as VW's volume seller �€" speaks to how
committed the market was to this specific body style. This
particular example presents in red over a black leather interior,
fitted with a black soft top and white convertible top liner. It is
a genuine Karmann Cabrio, not a converted sedan, and the original
VIN tag remains present. The undercarriage has been inspected and
shows clean structure �€" which, for a nearly 50-year-old open-top
car, is the single most important thing to verify. Features List -
1.6L Flat-4 Air-Cooled Engine (1600cc) - 4-Speed Manual
Transmission - Karmann Cabrio Convertible Body - Black Soft Top -
White Convertible Top Liner - Black Leather Bucket Seats - Black
Interior Door Panels - VW Steel Wheels - Chrome Bumpers (Front and
Rear) - Vent Windows - Clean Undercarriage - Original VIN Tag
Present Mechanical Power comes from the 1.6-liter air-cooled
flat-four, displacing 1,584cc �€" the engine designation VW
collectors commonly refer to as the 1600. By 1976, U.S.-market
Beetles used fuel delivery and emissions equipment specific to
federal and California regulations, but the core engine
architecture was the same proven design that Volkswagen had been
refining for decades. Air-cooled simplicity means no radiator, no
coolant, no water pump, and no freeze-up concerns. The engine sits
in the rear, driving the rear wheels through a 4-speed manual
gearbox with the shifter mounted on the tunnel �€" a
straightforward, well-understood drivetrain that any experienced VW
mechanic can service without specialized tooling. The Super
Beetle's MacPherson strut front suspension gives it a noticeably
different front-end feel compared to the older torsion-bar setup
used on standard Beetles. Steering is more predictable, and the
front wheels track better under load. Combined with the rear
swing-axle independent suspension, the Super Beetle Convertible
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