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Volkswagen Transporter

Series of vans

Volkswagen Transporter

Summary

Series of vans

FieldValue
nameVolkswagen Transporter
image2017 Volkswagen Transporter BlueMotion.jpg
manufacturerVolkswagen Commercial Vehicles
aka{{unbulleted list
productionNovember 1949 – present
assemblyGermany: Hanover
classLight commercial vehicle/Large MPV (Multivan/Caravelle) (M)
body_style{{unbulleted list

| Volkswagen Type 2 (until 2002) | Kombi | Van (cargo/passenger) | Minibus | Campervan | Pickup truck | Crew cab | Chassis cab

The Volkswagen Transporter, based on the Volkswagen Group's T platform, now in its seventh generation, refers to a series of vans produced for over 70 years and marketed worldwide.

The T series is now considered an official Volkswagen Group automotive platform. and generations are sequentially named T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6 and T7. Pre-dating the T platform designations, the first three generations were named Type 2, indicating their relative position to the Type 1, or Beetle. As part of the T platform, the first three generations are retroactively named T1, T2 and T3.

The Transporter is the best-selling van in history with over 12 million units sold worldwide, and it comprises a gamut of variants including vans, minivans / minibuses, campervans, and chassis cab and pickup trucks. Competitors include the Ford Transit, Toyota HiAce and Mercedes-Benz Vito.

TOC

Type 2

T1 (1950){{anchor|T1}}

Main article: Volkswagen Type 2 (T1)

Initially derived from the Volkswagen Type 1 (Volkswagen Beetle), the Volkswagen Type 2 (T1) was the first generation of Volkswagen's Transporter family.

File:1952 VW Barndoor brown back.jpg|T1 (front) File:1964 Volkswagen T1 Transporter Kombi bus (6106456722).jpg|T1 (rear)

T2 (1967){{anchor|T2}}

Main article: Volkswagen Type 2 (T2)

The Volkswagen T2 platform was marketed from 1967 through 1979 model years, with a Volkswagen Type 4 engine optionally available from 1972 on.

File:Vw bus t2b neu v sst.jpg|T2 File:VW T2b camper.JPG|T2b Camper

T3 (1979){{anchor|T3}}

Main article: Volkswagen Type 2 (T3)

The Volkswagen (Type 2) T3 Transporter, also known as T25 in the UK or VW Vanagon in the United States, was introduced in 1979. The T3 Transporter was one of the last all-new bodied Volkswagen platforms that still used an air-cooled, rear-engine design.

Compared to its predecessor, (the T2), the T3 was sturdier and heavier, with a slightly larger, much more square and boxy body, that offered more usable interior space than the original models' rounded front side, roof, and edges. The T3, with its front now folding sharply along a horizontal middle axis, instead of the old model's curve, is sometimes called "the wedge" by enthusiasts, to differentiate it from earlier VW "Kombis".

The Volkswagen air-cooled boxer engine was supplanted by a water-cooled one – though still rear-mounted – in 1983. Both Porsche and Oettinger built six-cylinder versions of the T3 Transporter in very small numbers, with the Porsche-built version achieving a top speed around 200 km/h.

A four-wheel drive Syncro model was introduced, premiering in January 1985.

While production of the T3 ended in Europe with the Syncro produced in Austria until 1992, the T3 was also produced in South Africa, until 2002.

File:Vw transporter t3 luft v sst.jpg|T3 (front) File:1984-1986 Volkswagen Caravelle (253) CL van (2015-12-07) 02.jpg|T3 (rear)

Transporter/Multivan

T4 (1990){{anchor|T4}}

Main article: Volkswagen Transporter (T4)

The first officially designated "T platform" vehicle, the Volkswagen Transporter (T4) dramatically updated the Volkswagen van line by using a front-mounted, front-wheel drive, water-cooled engine. The T4 was marketed in North America as the Volkswagen Eurovan.

File:VW Transporter 2.5Tdi 2002.jpg|T4 (front) File:VW T4 rear 20080215.jpg|T4 (rear)

{{anchor|T5}}T5 (2003)

Main article: Volkswagen Transporter (T5)

Two vehicles of the Belgian police: Federal on the left (two orange stripes on the rear door and a single one on the side) and local on the right (light blue stripes)

2003 (pre-facelift)

The Volkswagen Transporter (T5) is a variant of the Volkswagen T platform. In North America it was sold in Mexico but not in the United States nor Canada. As with other light trucks, the T5 range would face a 25% tariff, known as the chicken tax, if imported to the US.

File:VW T5 Transporter front 20080811.jpg|T5 (front; pre-facelift) File:VW T5 Transporter rear 20080811.jpg|T5 (rear; pre-facelift)

2009 (facelift)

File:VW Transporter TDI (T5) Facelift front 20100902.jpg|T5 (front; facelift) File:VW Transporter TDI (T5) Facelift rear 20100902.jpg|T5 (rear; facelift)

The Transporter T5 range received a facelift in late 2009. Updated powertrain options include common rail diesel engines, and a world-first usage in a light commercial vehicle of a dual clutch transmission – namely Volkswagen Group's 7-speed Direct-Shift Gearbox (DSG).

{{anchor|T6}}T6 (2016)

Main article: Volkswagen Transporter (T6)

In 2016, Volkswagen released the T6 Transporter which is based on the T5 Transporter. A refreshed version was first shown in 2019 as the T6.1 Transporter.

File:2017 Volkswagen Transporter T28 Highline TDi 2.0 Front.jpg|T6 (front; facelift) File:2018 Volkswagen Transporter T32 Highline TDi 2.0.jpg|T6 (rear; facelift)

{{anchor|T7}}T7

Multivan (2022)

Main article: Volkswagen Multivan (T7)

The T7 was released in November 2021 with petrol, diesel and PHEV variants and is only available as a minivan, replacing the Caravelle model for the U.K. market and Multivan in other markets. The T7 Multivan is based on Volkswagen's MQB platform.

The T7 Multivan is not to be confused with the new Volkswagen Transporter panel van and chassis cab models, which will be based on the new 2023 Ford Transit Custom and will be a larger vehicle than the Multivan. The new Transporter shares the vast majority of its body and mechanical components with the Transit, which will be built alongside the new VW Transporter at the Ford Otosan factory in Turkey.

File:VW Multivan 2.0 TDI Life (VII) – f 22012023.jpg|T7 Multivan (front) File:VW Multivan 2.0 TDI Life (VII) – h 22012023.jpg|T7 Multivan (rear)

Transporter (2024)

Main article: Volkswagen Transporter (2024)

In December 2023, the 7th Generation Transporter was officially teased with diesel, PHEV and electric powertrains, with a launch scheduled for the second quarter of 2024. Volkswagen have not applied the T7 designation to this model, which is officially known only as 'Transporter'.

File:VW Transporter, IAA 2024, Hanover (P1200130).jpg|7th Generation Transporter (front) File:IAA 2024, Hanover (P1200124).jpg|7th Generation Transporter (rear)

References

References

  1. (2002). "Europe's slight rise & anticipated decline – Auto by the Numbers – car sales, production in Western Europe – Illustration – Statistical Data Included". CBS Interactive Business UK.
  2. (March 2006). "Im Fokus: Volkswagen – Kernkompetenz: Sparen". Automobil-Produktion.de.
  3. (2015). "Top 20 best-selling vans of all time". Bauer Media.
  4. Verhelle, Tony. (1985-02-07). "63e salon voor bedrijfsvoertuigen: Geen schokkende dingen". Uitgeverij Auto-Magazine.
  5. Bell, Sebastien. (11 December 2023). "VW T7 Transporter Officially Teased With Diesel, PHEV, And All-Electric Powertrains".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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