April 6: A wonderful Saturday afternoon . . .
Read MoreThis Bus was advertised as a 23 Window tribute, although I'm not sure what that means. The Volkswagen Type 2, (as it is officially known), was available in several different configurations. The Panel van, (called a cargo van nowadays), has no side windows or rear seats. Adding those two items turns the Panel van into a passenger van or Kombi. The name Samba is used to identify a deluxe version of the Kombi that also has small skylight windows in the roof and a cloth sunroof, which this Bus has. So my initial guess was that someone took a standard Kombi and added a Samba roof during the restoration.
The 23-window part is where this gets confusing. The base Kombi prior to 1964 has 11 windows. The Deluxe Kombi added 4 more windows bringing the total to 15. The Samba added 8 small skylight windows to the roof bringing the total to 23. So the term "23-Window" means exactly what it says.
The confusing part is that beginning in 1964 the Deluxe Kombi only added 2 additional windows, (instead of 4), to the standard 11 bringing the total to 13. Adding the Samba's 8 additional windows brings the total to 21.
So if this is a 1964 model Bus as advertised, a Deluxe Samba would only have 21 windows instead of the 23 advertised on this Bus. My guess would be that the builder not only changed the roof during the restoration, but also the body side window configuration as well.I didn't see a display sign indicating which model this is. But the presence of three Venti-Ports on the front fenders means it's not an upper-level Series 70 Roadmaster, (it has 4 Venti-Ports). The shape of the rear fenders leads me to believe this is an entry-level Series 40 Special 2-door sedan, which would make it 1 of 32,684 made that year.