Readers may remember my other VW bus and associated hippie aspirations. By the time the mid ’90s were underway, the hippie in me was long-dead (never really worked for me, and no “free love” anymore), but my VW bus ideal was still alive and well.
I already owned several vehicles, including the previously written about 1957 IHC pickup, a Volvo 164, and something else I’m sure that I have forgotten about. But I never stop looking for a good deal on anything. One day I saw what might be a good deal in the paper; a 1979 VW Camper bus for nine hundred dollars in Portland. The ad said that the bus had transmission issues, just like my last VW van adventure. So I though it was certainly worth a look for nine hundred dollars!
I called a friend and had him drive me up from Dallas. We made our way to a fairly populous part of town where we found a tan VW bus parked on the side of the road. The owner was a younger fellow and told us that he had taken it to Baja and back several times but now the transmission was going out. I knew that there was a good chance that it was merely the linkage as in the last one. I knew it was a gamble, so I looked over the bus well. The engine ran great, the interior was filthy but all in good order. The canvas camper top was good and everything worked.
I paid the man his nine hundred dollars and took the chance that I might have to call a tow truck. But just like the last van it went into third and reverse just fine. So I drove it all the way back down I5 at 40-45 mph on the shoulder because I am too damn cheap to spring for a tow truck unless I absolutely have to!
image courtesy wetwesties.tripod.com
A word about camper buses; there was, of course, the Westfalia that you are more than likely familiar with. Then there were conversions done in the country of sale. Here in the USA, one of the most prolific aftermarket outfitters was Automotive Services Inc., in conjunction with Riviera, in Washington and Oregon. They purchased base model buses, had the tops made by Campmobile, and installed standard RV fare inside of them. For more reading and lots of eye candy, you can visit the ASI Riviera Registry here.
I parked it at my friend Bill’s house because he lived twenty miles closer, in Keizer. The next day, Bill’s teenage brother Jimmy came over. Jimmy loved Volkswagens, and when he saw the bus he went into a swoon. He looked it over inside and out and caressed it admiringly. I had some errands to run and left Jimmy to fawn over the new VW. When I got back to Bill’s house, Jimmy had taken it upon himself to clean out the bus. I was shocked that he would do that just for fun! And if you know anything about VW van people, you can guess how much dog hair and garbage was in it. I still owe him one for that.
After the cleaning, I set about work on the transmission linkage. As I had suspected, that’s all that was wrong with it. So, ten dollars and half an hour later and I had a fully functional van.
I had learned by that time that many things were much more simple than they were made out to be in the world of auto mechanics (just as the reverse was also true.) Once later on, Bill got bitten by the bus bug as well and was looking into buying one for three hundred dollars. The only problem was that it was dented in front and that it spewed gas all over when it ran. The owner told him that he had taken it to a German car mechanic (German for rip-off-artist) who diagnosed it as a bad injector line.
Since the lines were crimped on the injectors at the factory, it would need a new injector. All told, it was going to be well over five hundred dollars to fix. So Bill asked if I could come and see the van. I looked at it and asked Bill to give the owner the money now. He did, I then asked the owner if he would be angry if I fixed it right there, he said no. So, I cut off the factory crimp with a pair of snippers, cut a length of fuel line to size, slipped it on, hose clamped it, and it was all fixed for about five dollars in about ten minutes. And that is how one obtains a good deal on an old VW.
( The bus next to my IHC pickup in Dallas )
But I digress, let us get back to the 1979 camper. It had a propane refrigerator and stove, so I figured I should test them out. I took it to the gas station and had them fill the tank. But a problem developed. Apparently, the fill valve froze on! The gas began billowing out, eventually covering the whole parking lot in propane fog. I was getting pretty worried, but the attendant said it was all “very safe”. He called the propane supplier fellow up and asked him to come out.
After some time, a fellow in a white truck and blue overalls arrived. He took a look at the spewing propane and fetched a big pipe wrench out of his tool box. Then he set about beating the fill valve mercilessly with the wrench! After much abuse it broke free and the propane was shut off. I asked him if he was not worried about sparks and he casually told me that unless propane had just the right mixture with oxygen it would not ignite. As far as I know he is still alive to this day.
(The bus’s propane system in my imagination)
After all of the hubbub with the propane I finally tested out the system. To my surprise everything worked great, so I was all set for camping. However, I was a bit jaded by the propane experience so I never refilled it, instead relying on a Coleman stove.
The first camping trip I took it on was the Father-Son Camp-Out held by my church at the time. I took my first (and only at the time) son, who was about a year and a half old, as well as my good friend, the late Peter Puppo. The camp-out was at a remote lake at the end of an unmaintained road in the Cascade mountain range. The road was very rough, but proved no problem for the bus. What did prove a problem though, was bringing a one-and-a-half year old and having two men to take care of him camping.
I should here mention that Peter was in his fifties at the time, and had been a bachelor his entire life. I was a new father and we soon discovered that we had not fully calculated the difficulties arising from taking care of an infant still in diapers in a Volkswagen bus. How many men does it take to change a diaper in the middle of the night in a camper bus? More than two, I can tell you that!
I took the bus on many a camping trip (but never again with a toddler), and kept it stoked up with some supplies for spur-of-the-moment fishing or camping. One Friday afternoon, I was at Bill’s house and we decided it was time to go camping. So we grabbed the fishing poles, took a shotgun, a twenty-two rifle, and looked around for food. Bill had some eggs and I had some cans in the van. We were set, and off we went.
We arrived after dark and found that all of the food in the van was bean based. So we had eggs, beans, chili, and beer for dinner. Bill made the unwise decision to sleep in the cot in the top that night. After such a gastronomically volcanic meal, I spent much time venting in the lower bed. Bill spent most of the night with his face pressed against the screen in the canvas top gasping for fresh air.
Gas issues not withstanding, there are certain cars one regrets selling, and this is one of those cars. It was, in effect, the perfect Volkswagen bus; hydraulic lifters, two liter fuel injected engine, no rust issues, not leaky, all the electrics worked. Yes, I know what you are thinking – is that possible? It was, indeed. It was the rarest of Volkwagens – one that actually works well all of the time! But I had found a new love. Something tougher, bigger, stronger. And to get it I needed only four hundred dollars. So I sold the bus on a whim to the local VW shop for half of what I had paid (still regretting that one). But that is the subject of next week’s article.
Great story and love the pics. I had two fondly remembered buses, a ’67 and a ’72.
Of course now that we live in Georgia AC is a must, which pretty much rules out air-cooled VWs. I know some had it, but it was neither effective nor reliable from what I’ve seen and heard.
But the VW bus is an awesome vehicle, and I’d likely still have one if I’d stayed in the SF Bay area. Lord, I miss that good weather! Wonder if the summers I spent in GA will be credited as time in hell when I die? 🙂
last model split screen worth damn near gold over here 30k will get you a tidy project
Great van Michael great stiory I once went with a friend to collect a spare parts VW van with trailer and we towed the whole show very slowly home the vendors assured us it was dead and only good for parts it was also an automatic very rare here
We got it home ok and other than the tranny was a perfect match for my friend blue mare van how ever no keys I pulled the ignition switch jury rigged it and voila it ran well it drove and the tranny shifted ok yep the vendors had taken it to a VW specialist in Hobart and were shocked at the repair costs so sold it when in reality an after market switch would have fixed it so my mate got a good 1.8 carby engine and accessories for $ 400 when a used engine alone is $1500 bargain of the year.
Greetings from our old ’77 Chinook Camper in Glacier National Park! It’s made it so far, with only a wiper linkage that conked out, and I jury-rigged with some wire. Don’t leave home without the wire!
Internet is hard to find, and expensive around here, so I’ll make it quick. Nice story, but watch what you say about those hippies: I could have been in that picture!
See you all when I get back.
Paul – I wonder if you are at Kintla Lake campground in Glacier? My mother is the camphost there this entire summer but is either finished this weekend or next. I was up there earlier this summer with my 8year old – The last 12 miles on the road to Kintla took an hour and a half. I felt pretty manly pulling in in my Rav4 with all of the big 4x’s that were there that made it through that “road”…until half an hour later when 3 guys pulled in driving an ’87 LeSabre with wire wheel caps and pulling a trailer filled with canoes…
Have a good time!
Jim
My friend Scrumpy has a Kombi covered in people on his album cover, Some of us resemble those remarks, and of course the Kombi song written about the old blue mare
To both Bryce and Paul, defenders of dirty hippies; perhaps bathing was overrated in the 60’s, but allot of things changed, some for the better (like bathing), some for worse (like turning into a-holes working for the state government). As it happens I am no clean freak, not in the least. But I must not demure, even at risk of riling former and present dirty hippies, gentlemen; I still hate dirty hippies.
Greetings Paul. Take lot of pictures, okay?
One night, years ago, I picked up a cab I was supposed to drive. The wiper motor was blown, so the owner of the car attached a coat hanger to the driver’s wiper and instructed me to hang my left arm out the window and wipe it few times so I could see. It was raining torrents so I refused to drive the car. I was fired on the spot, only to be rehired two days later when a Sunday driver was needed!
String tied to the wiper blade tips then thru both1/4 windows to form a loop diconnect drive cable at wper motor pull string back and forth works fine on old Humber80 for 2 weeks untill I located another drive motor
I set out from Bloomington, Indiana, to Nashville, Tennessee (normally not necessary to specify the state, but Nashville, IN is very close to Bloomington) late one Friday evening, knowing I had a blown wiper motor (late -’80s Civic, BTW), and planning to replace it the next day at my friendly Honda dealer…everything went fine until I got within about 8 miles of home, and I was hit with a downpour of epic proportions…I had to put an arm out the window and try to wipe the windshield with a t-shirt, while driving very gingerly down I-65. I’m amazed I didn’t wreck the car and/or kill someone (possibly myself)–needless to say, I was in college. (Replaced the wiper motor the next day.)
I hope you have a great holiday,nothing better than being in nature or as we call it in Australia,the bush.
The remarks about nocturnal emissions in a close-fit camping setup like the VW, really ring home. Several times while I owned it, in the Navy…had been out with the buds on a little bonding-with-beer R&R session. The senior guy got his private quarters – he slept in his pickup truck. Us two lower-ranked goons, we slept in my Westfalia.
Beer and starch and steak and other junk…do need venting. And mosquitoes are pretty bold in Northern California. The tendency is to close the windows…until the tooting starts.
Micheal, you are just like me; you get a good ride and then cannot keep it. I can’t count how many times I have found really great cars after exhaustive searching, only to talk myself out of them, then repeat the process.
Examples? A mint, loaded 1978 LeSabre Custom with 70,000 km on it. A 1973 Dart Swinger with 1967 GT interior with factory new 2BBL Slant Six and Torqueflight. A 1980 Rabbit Diesel two door, five speed with sunroof, with turbo-diesel from a wrecked ’84 Jetta. A near mint 1978 Volare wagon Slant Six bought for $700. A 1985 Delta 88 Brougham with FE3, $1000. 1990 Cutlass Ciera, ran great, loads of power from the 3.3 V-6, $600. 1977 BMW R100, almost perfect. 1983 Yamaha Seca 650. 1984 Honda 500 Interceptor. 1984 Yahaha XJ750RL. 1990 RZ350, almost new when I got it. The list is very long and I kept none of them more than a year, most less than six months.
My latest find is a real gem and I love it. Perhaps, Micheal, we can form a mutual support group to leave well enough alone…..
LOl, yep, same disease. Sounds like you should take over COAL after I run out of cars!
I had forgotten the old Type 2 (well, the 2nd-gen Type 2) was made as late as ’79. I remember my parents looking at used cars in about 1975 or ’76 and my dad trying to get my mom to try out a Bus (not the camper version, just a basic bus), probably a ’73 or ’74. She instead decided she liked a ’73 Torino wagon, blue, with blue vinyl seats (awful in the summer) and a 351. (Cleveland or Windsor, I can’t remember). She wanted something with some pickup, as she put it. About a year later, it threw a rod. On Mother’s Day. As we were taking her to brunch after church. Given that it was the car she’d picked out, I’m sure the tension between my parents was greater than what they’d let on in front of us. My dad shelled out for an engine rebuild and we kept the car, and by that point he had too much in it to get rid of it for several more years…what might have been! He did wind up getting a Beetle for himself, though.
Thanks for yet another excellent article Michael – it made me smile after a long day! As a Volvo 164 fan (my grandparents bought one new when I was born in 1973), I hope we’ll read about that one day…!
Thanks so much. You can read the short account of it in comments as Junkharvester here: https://www.curbsideclassic.com/curbside-classics-european/curbside-classic-1975-volvo-164-e-the-anglo-scandinavian/ and of course there is my old 142S here: https://www.curbsideclassic.com/auto-biography/the-cars-of-a-lifetime-1968-volvo-142s-what-is-this-pedal-for-car-no-1/
Excellent! Thanks for the links, I just read both, amusing and informative! The crushed exhaust on the 164E was best! And if you ever took it to extremely high altitude you would have found another fun wee issue with them – the fuel injection (on the ’73 models anyway) gets altitude sickness and vapourises the fuel… Oh, and when the throttle linkage breaks, it jams wide open… My grandfather tells me it wasn’t so much fun when both happened the same day on a mountain pass…! Cheers!
I’ll never forget that trip. “Stink” does not even come close to describing the smell of death upstairs that night. Thank God it was only one night.
I loved the orange 79 with the clamped injector line. The crumpled front was well hidden with flat black paint and a spare tire cover.
You may remember the auxiliary in line duct heater booster fan from JC Whitney… worked well and loud as hell. Evened out the noise level in the cabin, though.
I remember an article in 4 Wheel Drive magazine saying something like – “don’t be discouraged if you arrive at your destination in a remote wooded area and see a VW Bus there…those things will go just about anywhere.”
Yeah I found that that little fan was just a boat engine vent fan. Cheaper through marine supply houses.
I found this site looking for info on VW Riveria Camper, as we just purchased one. I was amazed to see the picture from my college days. Actually those were not dirty hippies but poor students at an anti war rally protesting the war in Vietnam. Not sure if your comment about ‘hippies’ was a joke or if you seriously know so little about the 60 s and 70s that you can make such a blanket negative statement.
Could you please credit my Riviera brochure scan? It came from my 1998 created http://wetwesties.tripod.com site. (Full URL is: http://wetwesties.tripod.com/riviera/index.html)
The original brochure is on my bookshelf.
Thanks.
Jim Arnott
wetwesties.org
Done! Thanks.
I worked in admin for the capital city of the state of Tasmania from 1976 until 1985.Or until I was 29yo.The Hobart City Council bought one of the last 2 litre Microbus VW vans.It was the curved fishbowl windscreen model and an eight seater and automatic gearbox with an HCC sticker on the rear window.Approx 1983 the landscape architect for Parks and Recreation resigned so we office staff and the director took him to lunch,just a few blocks up the road to the finest Italian restaurant in Tasmania and also Australia.I parked the bus at a parking meter and after a very fine lunch it was time to drive back to the Town Hall,just down the road.The indicator for the automatic gearbox was down on the floor and difficult to see.I put the bus in reverse,I thought,prodded the accelerator pedal and nothing happened.I had the front wheels turned to the left to reverse out of the spot and the director said you have to give the pedal a strong push,I did and it was in drive,mounted the kerb and made the parking meter horizontal.The director swore loudly and yelled quick get the f–k out of here before anyone sees us.We were all sworn to secrecy and the bus only had a slight dent in its bumper bar.
In 1977 I was driving my mint condition 1954 Vauxhall Velox. When a teenager I bought a 1959 light brown coloured split windscreen VW roughly fitted as a camper van.So in 1977 I spent each weekend researching VW campers.Bought most English camper magazines to study.My girlfriend grew so tired of having to hop out of the Velox to look at every VW camper for sale,she eventually refused to look at another one.People told me that most Australian converted VW campers rattled a lot at low milages.I liked the look of the English Dormobile,concertina roof,two long glass panels and two airvents in the roof.One Friday evening we were driving in the city and there on the side of the road was a Dormobile with a for sale sign,$4400.Knocked on the door and a former English soldier and his wife told us they were recent arrivals and regrettably were selling the van for a deposit on a house.He told me that when you cut a hole in the roof it alters the structural integrity but with the English Dormobile they weld a strong metal panel within the weelbase to counteract any weakness from the hole in the roof,hence no rattles.The van had two hammocks above with a gap between so if people sleeping above,you could still have enough headroom to stand upright.Aussie campers had a fridge or stove behind the passenger seat and sliding door.This one just had a window sill height small narrow wardrobe.In fact no part of the furniture was higher than window sill height,making great visibility.The stove was hinged behind the passenger seat and you sat in the drivers seat to cook,making the rear uncluttered.Two small folding seats could be placed in slots between the front seats,facing to the rear and in the face of the wardrobe.So the van was a seven seat vehicle.It was only a 1600cc engine so not fast but surprisingly economical,28 to 32 miles per gallon.Looked at it on a Friday evening and we were due up North at my sister’s country bush house,so had to drive to dad’s place 60 miles away for a cheque to cover the agreed price of $4200.On a very steep part of the highway we came across another young couple stranded on the road with a broken down VW 1500 station wagon,they had a rope so we towed them to dad’s house with the old Velox.They gave us a bottle of champagne and were so pleased to be able to park their car and use the phone to arrange a lift.We drove back to Hobart,handed over the cheque and then headed off,late at night now,for our weekend in our beautiful 1972 Dormobile.
I found a 1978 Riviera and bought it sight unseen almost two years ago. In my opinion, 1978 and 79 Rivieras were the best combination of interior layout, largest engine (2.0 liter), hydrolic lifters, functionality and all around fun! The *only* downside is that I see so few on the road and at shows.
Thank you for the reminder that there are other Rivieras out there!