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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 5:46 am Post subject: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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I can hardly believe this, but we have just bought (another!) Australian Dormobile camper conversion (known locally as a ‘Kombi’)!
There’s a bit of a story behind it, but I thought I would start a thread to document the tale of how we came to hear about her, the back story, post pictures and discuss our plans. Eventually it should include an Aussie road trip before bringing her back from Canberra to Scotland, the restoration/preservation process and onwards to other adventures!
She is very well preserved thanks to the dry climate, regular servicing and careful storage, still in the original ‘Martini Olive’ paint, with the patina of careful use but remarkably similar to our current Kombi, which we shipped back from Melbourne in 2001 and some of you will know the Samba thread: 'Let's Go! Scotland-Croatia and onwards in our Kombi!'
First, some pictures to whet your appetite!...
_________________ 1978 marino yellow Bay Dormobile camper
1969 signal orange Karmann Ghia convertible
1976 martini olive Bay Dormobile camper
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 6:28 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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So, what’s the story?
I have a long term online friendship with another Samba member from Australia, as we both have Dormobile campers, a little different from the British Dormobile, converted in the factory in Fishwyk, Canberra. We started a thread here: Official Aussie Dormobile conversion thread
He came to know of another Dormobile Kombi that was serviced in the same garage, and knew that it was a really nice, solid, original example. The gentleman owner had had it for 35 years and had reluctantly decided that it was time to let her go. We had admired the vehicle when my friend told us about it a few years ago but after some long and complicated three-way discussion and negotiation we all came to an arrangement that everyone was happy with and now we are the proud new owners!
There is a bit of flexibility about our plans but the Kombi will be carefully looked after until next year, when Shona and I will travel out to Australia and take a camping road trip before shipping back to the UK. Our friend will hopefully then come over for a reciprocal road trip while we embark on a sympathetic restoration/preservation process to protect the Kombi from our harsher (colder, wetter!) climate, but preserving the remarkable original features.
She’s not perfect, but the paint is still the original Australian Dulux CLR 622 ‘martini olive’, with a few dings and paint chips, rubbed off patina at the drivers door, and some rust where the roof rack attaches but I think will cut back and polish up very nicely indeed.
The interior is very original, as we can tell by comparison with our two busses, although the upholstery has been redone many years ago. There are rear seat belts and it is stamped as suitable for four occupants. The cabinets have a little water damage (but not as bad as our orange Kombi) the cooker is pristine, the Voxson radio-cassette player is suitably retro and the 3-way fridge looks good.
The side-hinged pop top roof is in fairly good condition, with the Australian spec yellow canvas, and the two tartan bunks look unused.
I don’t have photos of the engine bay, but we do have a lot of video! It is very clean, very original and the type 4, fuel injection, manual transmission setup should be a good combination. The undercarriage is very clean and essentially rust free, even the front beam grease points have been kept clean and tidy!
Test drive revealed the engine, gear change, steering and brakes are all impressively crisp and tight.
More pictures:
_________________ 1978 marino yellow Bay Dormobile camper
1969 signal orange Karmann Ghia convertible
1976 martini olive Bay Dormobile camper
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appetite Samba Member
Joined: September 28, 2004 Posts: 127 Location: New Jersey
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 6:46 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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Lordy that's a beautiful bus. _________________ 69 Westy |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 8:14 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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A couple more things I have pictures of; 170,000km (just after 100k miles) confirmed by the service documents, you can see a few rusted stone chips in the front panel and the windscreen seal has had black sealant smooshed around the edge. I don’t think this has been applied to cover up major windscreen rust, judging by the rest of the bus. The hubcaps are the early deep dome style but apparently they were there from early on, anyone have any ideas?
I’ll have to think about how to approach any restoration, but my aim will be to be pretty ‘light touch’ as I think the original features and ‘patina’ of age will be nice to keep. The mechanicals do seem to have been taken care of very well-what are the failure prone parts of the EFI setup (we have dual carbs at the moment), the steering and brakes are generally very good. The mechanic commented that the rear brakes will need work in the next 10,000km (whatever that means!) I expect I will dismantle and grease the adjusters etc.
The paintwork should compound, polish and wax up very well and I have a friend who can deal with the worst rust spots like the rear gutter rails. The interior just needs a little detailing but is usable as is.
Underneath the bus is essentially rust free, so my thought is to really clean up and rub down and treat any surface rust and then either touch up the paint or apply a clear, waxy underseal before the Scottish climate gets hold of it (our current Kombi shows what 18 years exposure can do, so I want to get in there early).
I really want us to be able to use this bus, but maybe to be a bit more selective about how much exposure to the weather it will get!
_________________ 1978 marino yellow Bay Dormobile camper
1969 signal orange Karmann Ghia convertible
1976 martini olive Bay Dormobile camper
Stop dead photo links! Post photos to The Samba Gallery! |
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MorkC68 Samba Member
Joined: December 23, 2015 Posts: 619 Location: Nottingham, England
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 10:16 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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That looks lovely, well done on the purchase.
It’s a great story for her history too, you going out to Australia and then the PO coming over here, not every bus has that!
You will, hopefully, enjoy a fuel injected bus, I certainly do on Major.
_________________ Major; 1977 Westfalia Campmobile
- Subaru EJ20
- Koni Classic adjustable dampers & Empi Heavy Duty Anti Roll Bar
- 180W Solar System
My photography work : https://lencilcreations.picfair.com/ |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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ImAddicted Samba Member
Joined: April 24, 2012 Posts: 1199 Location: Unorganized Territory, Maine
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 2:48 pm Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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You’ll need another cat, one for each bus... _________________ 1979 Transporter (sold)
KC1MUR
strfish7 wrote: |
Original condition, which means something different on this forum than anywhere else! |
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notchboy Samba Member
Joined: April 27, 2002 Posts: 22598 Location: Escondido CA
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Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 10:07 pm Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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Wow - seriously cool bus!
Whats with the windshield wipers? CKD converted for Oz? _________________
t3kg wrote: |
OK, this thread is over. You win. |
Jason "notchboy" Weigel
1964 1500 S
1964 T34 S Convertible
1977 Westfalia Camper pop-top |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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1970fun Samba Member
Joined: August 24, 2008 Posts: 210 Location: Holland
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Posted: Sun Jun 23, 2019 10:10 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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Hi Phil,
Looks like a very solid and tidy van
Seperate bedrooms if you take both |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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TomWesty Samba Member
Joined: November 23, 2007 Posts: 3482 Location: Wyoming,USA
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2019 1:07 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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Dormobiles are my favorite conversion. Isn’t having 2 of them cheating somehow? Nice bus Phil! I look forward to your travels and adventures in this bus. _________________ If you haven't bled on them, you haven't worked on them.
Visit: www.tomcoryell.com and check out my music! |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2019 6:04 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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TomWesty wrote: |
Dormobiles are my favorite conversion. Isn’t having 2 of them cheating somehow? Nice bus Phil! I look forward to your travels and adventures in this bus. |
You’re right Tom, it feels like cheating. Actually, it really feels like cheating on our faithful orange Kombi! I don’t know how anyone can justify having two such similar vehicles but, as long as we can sort out proper long term storage, they both have slightly different niches in our life!
‘Olive’ has been collected from the PO now and I have some thought provoking photos of the problem areas that I can share with you. But first, the PO had some pictures of his previous kombis! The Split is UK registered, about 1962 and is pictured in Europe and ?Colorado and the early bay is another Dormobile camper, in Australia. I think the driver must be the recent owner, and the wee boy his son!
_________________ 1978 marino yellow Bay Dormobile camper
1969 signal orange Karmann Ghia convertible
1976 martini olive Bay Dormobile camper
Stop dead photo links! Post photos to The Samba Gallery! |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2019 6:24 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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So, this is the post I really don’t want to make...
Actually, I’ll save the photos for the next post!
Basically, this bus is still original paint as far as we can tell. Understandably, there is the wear and tear of over 40 years, mostly in active service! I’ve no real doubt that the intact paint can be clay barred, compounded, polished and waxed to a great finish, but there are a few problem areas. Some could be left as is, some could be fairly easily treated and colour matched, like the rear guttering where the roof rack has been sitting. Bearing in mind the wetter Scottish climate we will eventually return to, some whole panels might be better resprayed, maybe the front panel and the rear roof? You will see the rear roof actually has a soft dent, which could be left, or could be pushed out from the inside.
My friend has had his camper treated with a hard ceramic coating to preserve the paint and pop-top. I don’t know if anyone has experience of this type of finish, but I would worry that over time, surface rust would inevitably continue, and I’m not sure if it would make future paintwork or rust treatment more difficult. Comments welcome!
Ceramic coating paint protection _________________ 1978 marino yellow Bay Dormobile camper
1969 signal orange Karmann Ghia convertible
1976 martini olive Bay Dormobile camper
Stop dead photo links! Post photos to The Samba Gallery! |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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notchboy Samba Member
Joined: April 27, 2002 Posts: 22598 Location: Escondido CA
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:12 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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My 77 Westfalia has a lot of similar spots, war wounds, scars, and wear. I get the most comments from the door area where your ass has worn the paint on the doglegs getting in and out. People think that's cool for some reason. My nose is pocked with rock dings and a small dent or two.
I trashed my drip rail with the new awing I put on. Had it spot repaired and you would never know. I also had the same spot where the latch from the slider hits the C pillar. Bugger spot that looks like shit till its fixed again.
But with 85% of the OG paint, I'm hard-pressed to ever paint her. You have even more OG paint.
If she were mine, Id do a very sympathetic touch-up. Fix those obvious gnarls like the drip rails and some of the deeper scratches. But most of them Id let be. Tidy up the dings and touch of paint here and there followed by a good clay and buff - then call it good.
She can look a million bucks without going overboard. Preservation over restoration. She's going to be an awesome one whatever path you take.
_________________
t3kg wrote: |
OK, this thread is over. You win. |
Jason "notchboy" Weigel
1964 1500 S
1964 T34 S Convertible
1977 Westfalia Camper pop-top |
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WildIdea Samba Member
Joined: September 17, 2016 Posts: 939 Location: Black Hills, South Dakota
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Posted: Mon Jun 24, 2019 7:39 am Post subject: Re: 1976 ‘Martini Olive’ Aussie Dormobile Kombi |
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Wow, what a bus!
I'll whole heartedly second what notchboy said. I would take an original paint bus with blems over a respray 11 times out of 10. I dig the originality.
Not only that, arguably, the factory part is more durable than any aftermarket paint you could put on there. Not only were the conditions superior at the factory, but the paint they applied was more durable. Now with all the EPA restriction, its just not made out of the same ingredients. I'm sure someone will argue that modern paint is great if used applied properly, and probably can be, but I see bubbled up places on resprays all the time and thats grosser than a scratch to me. I would maybe soft touch up a few areas and when a hole developed where metal should be, then cut out the panel and repaint, but not a min before that. I just don't think that a the bus that is stored out of the weather, problems won't develop at any serious alarming rate. And if you resprayed that nose you would never relax driving it! Right now it can take a licking and not have you screaming.
Love the photos, Good luck with the bus! _________________ 1977 Sage Green Westy
https://www.thesamba.com/vw/forum/viewtopic.php?t=691987
1965 SWR Walk-Through Standard
1960 211 Panel American Camper Conversion |
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mcdonaldneal Samba Member
Joined: June 13, 2013 Posts: 2710 Location: Gullane, Scotland
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