Dune buggies popped up in the news several times this week. The open-bodied American car culture icon that took hold in the 1960s on shortened VW Beetle chassis inspired a VW electric concept vehicle, ...
Chet Acord is a retired engineer living in Grand Junction, Colorado, an 11-hour drive from this place. He’d towed the dune ...
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Bruce Meyers was hanging out at Pismo Beach on California’s Central Coast one afternoon in 1963 when he saw something that both blew his mind and changed his life: a handful of old, ...
If you never got the chance to own an original or new Meyers Manx Buggy from the 1960s, this might be your only chance.
Danger (apparently) meant nothing to Bruce Meyers. Given his extraordinary life, one might theorize that death couldn't catch up to the dune-buggy racing legend. He was a southern California ...
The Meyers Manx is far from dead, and in fact, a new chapter in the life of the iconic off-road dune buggy kit car is beginning. Bruce Meyers, the designer of the Meyers Manx, has sold his company, ...
Bruce Meyers—fine artist, surfer, designer, hot-rodder, Navy hero, off-road racer, and inventor of the dune buggy—has died. He was 94. Above, Meyers jumping an early Manx prototype in 1966. Meyers is ...
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 ...
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 ...
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