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AZKCMale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 20 2004,11:52 am Post # 1 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

This was in our local Truly Nolen parking lot the other day, cool little BMW.....



Parked in the back of an old school VW pick up



But of course you don't need gimicks to kill bugs, for the primo of all bug killers :guns in Southern California get a hold of Scott at Roadrunner Exterminating :good  

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RiverLiverMale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 20 2004,1:52 pm Post # 2 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

I work for Truly Nolen about 22 years ago. They had a very cool T-bird at that office..


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Havasu DougMale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 20 2004,1:54 pm Post # 3 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

Quote (AZKC @ June 20 2004,11:52 am)
This was in our local Truly Nolen parking lot the other day, cool little BMW.....



Parked in the back of an old school VW pick up



But of course you don't need gimicks to kill bugs, for the primo of all bug killers :guns in Southern California get a hold of Scott at Roadrunner Exterminating :good  

The Bug Man

:rotflmao Turn a post into a commercial :rotflmao

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That car MUST be from AZ.  I've never seen one dressed as a scorpion. :rotflmao






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tunamasterMale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 21 2004,7:04 am Post # 4 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

That is the steve erkle car.


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Post Icon Posted: June 21 2004,4:48 pm Post # 5 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

I know nobody probably cares, but;


The Isetta was incubated in the post-war economy of Europe. After the war, many people did not have the money to afford large automobiles and instead moved about on scooters and motorcycles. Renzo Rivolta, who made Iso S.p.A. refrigeradors in Milan, Italy, entered the market at this time with a line of scooters, motorcycles, and three wheeled trucks. After some success with these vehicles, he decided to move into the automobile business.

Designed and developed during 1952-1953, Iso presented the first Isetta (literally, little Iso) at the 1953 Turin Motor Show. Looking like the result of a high speed collision between a refrigerator, a scooter, and an airplane at a Lawrence Welk show (champagne bubbles, get it?), the Iso Isetta was only 4.5 ft wide and 7.5 ft long. The car had a single door at the front, rear wheels that were only 19 in. apart, and gas mileage of over 50 miles per gallon. The two-cylinder, two-stroke engine allowed a top speed of 45 mph and could propell the Isetta to 30 mph in 36 seconds. Iso began production in Italy and in Belgium for domestic sales and limited export.

Iso entered four or five Isettas into the storied Mille Miglia (1,000 mile) race of 1954. The Isetta finished 1, 2 and 3 on the index of performance. BMW scouts witnessed the impressive showing of the little car. At the time, BMW was producing the 502 and the 507: cars that few Germans could afford to buy in the post-war economy. Therefore, the company was on the lookout for an inexpensive economy car, and the Isetta fit the bill. Iso licensed the car to BMW in 1955.

Iso also licensed the car to Isetta Automobiles of Brazil and the cars manufactured there for five years beginning in 1956 were christened Romi-Isetta. These Brazilian Isettas kept the Iso design and used Iso engines until 1958, when they switched to the BMW 300 cc engines. In addition, Iso licensed the car to VELAM in France. The car was also built by Iso in Spain and Belgium.

BMW made the Isetta its own. They redesigned the powerplant around a more reliable BMW one-cylinder, four-stroke, 247 cc motorcycle engine with 13 hp. Although the major elements of the Italian design remained intact, BMW re-engineered much of the car, so much so that none of the parts between a BMW Isetta Moto Coupe and an Iso Isetta interchange. The first BMW Isetta appeared in April, 1955. BMW introduced the restyled Isetta Moto Coupe DeLuxe (sliding-window Isetta) in October 1956 with the larger 298 cc motor for export. Legend has it that BMW would not be here today if not for the success of the little Isetta.

Under license from BMW, Isetta of Great Britain also began producing cars (the sliding-window variety) at Brighton in 1957 with selected domestic parts. The Isetta was initially not popular in Great Britain until a three-wheeled version was introduced. The three-wheeled version was taxed at a much lower rate than the four-wheeled version. Isetta of Great Britain continued to produce four-wheeled Isettas, but only for export to Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. BMW began exporting Isettas to the U.S. (to a lukewarm response) in 1957. Overall, the Isetta was successful enough to encourage BMW to produce the 600, which shared the Isetta’s front door and a motorcycle engine (600 cc) and the more car-like 700 (also powered by a motorcycle engine).

Due to competition from faster and more car-like mini-cars (specifically the BMC Mini), BMW stopped production of the Isetta in 1962. Isetta of Great Britain also stopped production of the little cars but continued to produce Isetta engines until 1964. Romi-Isetta in Brazil continued to manufacture the original Italian Isetta until 1959 and produced spare parts until 1961..

Thanks to BMW, the Isetta was the most successful of the bubble cars. BMW built 136,367 Isettas. Isetta of Britain produced about 30,000 cars. Romi-Isetta manufactured about 3,000 of which an estimated 200 remain. Velam produced about 5,000 cars. Iso itself only made about 1,000 Isettas. Of the cars made by BMW, about 8,500 were exported to the U.S. of which it is estimated 1,000 still survive.

In 1980, there was a brief attempt to bring the Isetta back into production as the 'Diaseta.' The Diaseta was the Isetta with several minor modifications

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My Man's Sportin' WoodFemale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 21 2004,7:11 pm Post # 6 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

Very cool.  Thanks for sharing that bit of history, Bob. :good
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Bullitt BobMale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 21 2004,8:33 pm Post # 7 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

Quote (My Man's Sportin' Wood @ June 21 2004,7:11 pm)
Very cool.  Thanks for sharing that bit of history, Bob. :good

Thank you. :beer


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GoFastRacerMale Offline
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Post Icon Posted: June 21 2004,8:39 pm Post # 8 see this member send this member a private message  quote this post in reply

Thanks for the info, I knew some of it but not all!.. :good  :good  :beer
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