Since its inception as the original dune buggy in 1964, Meyers Manx has been an icon of the off-road racing world. And now, ...
Richard Tuthill has the bit between his teeth now—that steely eyed look of all annoyingly talented drivers when they’re in ...
Owing to a dearth of donor VW Beetles for the chassis, few people are building fun cars like today's Nice Price or No Dice dune buggy anymore. That's too bad and makes street-legal fun cars like this ...
The VW-based Meyers Manx largely created off-road racing and defined beach-bum living for a solid chunk of the 1960s and ’70s. Now, the name is returning with the Meyers Manx 2.0 Electric, a newly ...
The seller of today's Nice Price or No Dice VW Dune Buggy notes in the ad that, at 80 years of age, they do not need the project of bringing it back from a decades-long stint in storage. Could it be ...
View post: Walmart Has a 'Spacious" $949 Outdoor Storage Shed on Sale for 58% Off The legendary Meyers Manx emerged in the early 1960s as a funky dune buggy with VW Beetle running gear. Though it’s ...
Meyers, now 94, founded his first company in the mid-1960s to market his VW Beetle-based kit, which was offered through 1971. He then rebooted the brand in 2000 and has been selling the buggys and ...
When he built a stripped down, candy-colored car mounted on four large wheels to surf the sand on California beaches in 1963, Bruce Meyers could scarcely have imagined his “dune buggy” would become ...
Dune buggies used to be a cultural phenomenon back in the 60s and 70s, and while they are not as popular as they used to be, they are just as cool. There is no denying that racing across the sand with ...
Veteran dune buggy manufacturer Meyers Manx has debuted a new all-electric spin on the vehicle that put its name on the map. During Monterey Car Week, the company introduced the Resorter – a ...
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