White Volkswagen Cabriolet
Oh, this car is white all right.
White paint, a white ragtop, white hubcaps . . . must be the California look! :-) And to think, this car has Pennsylvania plates.
This is a 1990 Volkswagen Golf Cabriolet - marketed as just the Cabriolet in North America - featuring a 1.8-liter inline four with just 94 horses. It remained popular after the Mark 1 Golf/Rabbit on which it was based was replaced by the second-generation Golf, and given the success of the Mark 2, I think it was a mistake for VW not to make a convertible based on that car. Fiat and Talbot had introduced new compact convertibles in Europe in the early eighties, and Ford soon followed up with a European Escort convertible (which, sadly, was never offered in North America). Automotive journalists expected Volkswagen to respond with a Mark 2 Golf convertible, but that never happened.
Oh, well, the old Golf convertible still sold well, As usual, the majority of American customers were women.
Taken with my flip phone.
White Volkswagen Cabriolet
Oh, this car is white all right.
White paint, a white ragtop, white hubcaps . . . must be the California look! :-) And to think, this car has Pennsylvania plates.
This is a 1990 Volkswagen Golf Cabriolet - marketed as just the Cabriolet in North America - featuring a 1.8-liter inline four with just 94 horses. It remained popular after the Mark 1 Golf/Rabbit on which it was based was replaced by the second-generation Golf, and given the success of the Mark 2, I think it was a mistake for VW not to make a convertible based on that car. Fiat and Talbot had introduced new compact convertibles in Europe in the early eighties, and Ford soon followed up with a European Escort convertible (which, sadly, was never offered in North America). Automotive journalists expected Volkswagen to respond with a Mark 2 Golf convertible, but that never happened.
Oh, well, the old Golf convertible still sold well, As usual, the majority of American customers were women.
Taken with my flip phone.