Concept cars live a funny life. Many of them get made on paper, literally drawn out and sketched. Some of those napkin designs make it to a larger drawing pad to refine details and lock down a thesis.
Electric vehicles have done plenty to cast off their "earnestly green and dull" reputation, with super-fast acceleration, enough to embarrass all but the speediest gas-powered hypercar. Now it's time ...
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 ...
Per TechCrunch, the Meyers Manx 2.0 will come with two battery packs, 20 kWh or 40 kWh. Those packs will deliver either 150 or 300 miles of range for the road-legal dune buggy. The latter will allow ...
The Meyers Manx, the iconic 1960s dune buggy, is returning as the new all-electric Meyers Manx 2.0. The original Manx, the first “dune buggy,” was a kit car, built on a modified VW Beetle chassis with ...
Dune buggies have been around for decades, but their popularity spiked in the 1960s when Bruce Meyers created a lightweight VW Beetle-based beach buggy variant that came with a fiberglass body. He ...
The beloved Meyers Manx fiberglass dune buggy was created by Bruce Meyers in 1964 as a bolt-on kit for Volkswagen Beetle floorpans, turning the economy car into an adept off-roader. Sixty years later ...
Tamiya has a special place in the heart of ’80s kids, who would assemble their own off-road RC buggies and race them in the dirt. Those same ’80s kids are now old enough to buy real project cars, so a ...
In the mid-1960s, California beach and surf culture was catching on in a big way. From bands and music like "The Beach Boys," to fashion trends like the bikini, folks everywhere strived to emulate ...
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