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Added on the 15/06/2023 07:50:55 - Copyright : Auto Moto EN
If you're a baby boomer, chances are that you remember those far out times when love and peace were the words on everyone's tonge and the Volkswagen hippie van was the vehicle of choice. Well those days of nostalgia no longer have to be relegated to the distant past - Volkswagen has remade the iconic Type 2 Bus and shown it off at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit on Monday . It's called BUZZ ID, and it's the first driverless all-electric micro bus that features front and rear wheel drive. ID BUZZ can travel up to 372 miles on a single charge. When the van is running in self-driving mode, the front seats turn around and the steering wheel retracts, creating an interior space for up to eight people. ID BUZZ is expected to hit the market in 2020.
Wolfsburg (Germany), March 24 (EFE / EPA) .- (Camera: Focke Strangmann) The German automaker Volkswagen on Friday began the distribution of its new ID.4 electric car in Germany.FOOTAGE OF THE PRESENTATION OF THE VOLKSWAGEN NEW ELECTRIC CAR IN WOLFSBURG, GERMANY.
Dresden (Germany), Sep 23 (EFE / EPA), (Camera: Filip Singer).- The new Volkswagen ID3 was presented on Wednesday at the Dresden factory.The company's national coach Joachim Löw visited the production line and posing for photographs with the new electric model.FOOTAGE OF THE PRESENTATION.
Volkswagen presented their new electric car, dubbed the I.D., at the 2016 Paris Motor Show at the Porte de Versailles exhibition centre on Wednesday. The I.D. is expected to be available to consumers in 2020 and Volkswagen has announced that an autonomous driving option will become available in 2025. The five-door hatchback with rear-wheel drive has an electric motor positioned at its tail, freeing up space at the front of the vehicle and providing a motor output of 168 horsepower. The car is expected to be able to travel between 250 to 375 miles on a single charge and has options for wired and wireless fast charging capabilities.
Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn faces a reckoning with his board, summoned to explain how the company falsified U.S. emissions tests in the biggest scandal in the 78-year history of the world's largest car maker. Ivor Bennett reports.
Thousands of Colombians march through the capital city of Bogota to mark International Workers' Day. IMAGES