B. F. Meyers & Co.
The commercially manufactured
Meyers Manx Mk I featured an open-wheeled
fiberglass bodyshell, to be coupled by its purchaser with the Volkswagen Type 1
flat-four engine (1.2 L, 1.3 L, 1.5 L and 1.6 L, in different models) and a modified
RR-layout Beetle pan. It is a small car, with a
wheelbase shorter than a Beetle automobile for lightness and better maneuverability. For this reason, the car is capable of very quick acceleration and good
off-road performance, despite not being
four-wheel drive. The usually street-legal car redefined and filled a recreational and competitive niche that had been essentially invented by the first civilian
Jeep in 1945, and which was later to be overtaken by straddle-ridden, motorcycle-based
all-terrain vehicles (introduced in 1970) and newer, small and sporty (but usually four-wheel-drive), off-road automobiles. The commercial Meyers Manx received widespread recognition when it defeated motorcycles, trucks and other cars to win the inaugural 1967
Mexican 1000 race (the predecessor of the
Baja 1000). It crossed automotive press genre and was selected as the cover story for the August 1966 issue of
Hot Rod Magazine. Approximately 6,000 original Manx kits were manufactured, but when the design became popular, many copies (estimated at a quarter of a million worldwide) were made by other companies. Although already patented, Meyers & Co. lost in court to the copiers, the judge rescinding his patent as unpatentable, opening the floodgates to the industry Meyers started. Since then, numerous vehicles of the general "dune buggy" or "beach buggy" body type, some VW-based, have been produced. An early example was the
Imp by EMPI (1968–1970), which borrowed styling elements from the
Chevrolet Corvette but was otherwise Manx-like. A later 1970s Manx clone was the Dune Runner from Dune Buggy Enterprises in
Westminster, California. The Meyers company attempted to stay ahead of this seemingly unfair competition with the release of the distinctive, and harder-to-copy,
Meyers Manx Mk II design. B. F. Meyers & Co. also produced other Beetle-based vehicles, including the May 1970 Car & Driver magazine cover
sporty Manx SR variant (street
roadsters, borrowing some design ideas from the
Porsche 914), the '''Meyers Tow'd''' (sometimes referred to as the "Manx Tow'd", a non-street-legal racing vehicle designed to be towed to the desert or beach), the '''Meyers Tow'dster
(a street-legal hybrid of the two), and Meyers Resorter
a.k.a. Meyers Turista''' (a small recreational or "
resort" vehicle inspired by
touring motorcycles). The Manx SR2 was a modified SR that was only produced by later manufacturers including Karma Coachworks, Heartland Motors and Manx Motors of MD. While the Tow'd was a minimal off-road racer and the SR/SR2 was a showy roadster, the Tow'dster was a compromise between a dune-capable vehicle and a more utilitarian street rod, and "paved the way for the rail-type buggy that was to dominate the buggy scene following the demise of the traditional Manx-type buggy." The company ceased operation in 1971, after financial troubles, including with the
Internal Revenue Service; and Bruce Meyers himself had already left his own company by then. ==Meyers Manx, Inc.==