Background
Convertible versions of Volkswagen models have always traditionally been outsourced to coachbuilders Karmann. VW eventually swallowed the famous firm in 2010 as Karmann struggled to stay afloat, with more and more manufacturers taking drop-top production in-house. VW’s Osnabrück facility represents the remnants of Karmann today – a sad end for a firm with such famous models as the Karmann-Ghia, Beetle convertible and two generations of the Scirocco, plus the Corrado, to its name. And that’s just its VW credits.
Following on from the commercial success of the rag-top Beetle, VW commissioned Karmann to produce its sequel – based on the new Golf. Though the popularity of the Beetle – especially in open-top form – ensured its production would overlap the Golf’s for the first 11 months.
The world got its first look at what would later become a smash hit at the Geneva Motor Show on February 27, 1979. By the end of production in 1993, an astonishing 388,522 Golf cabriolets had been sold. During the 1980s, especially in the US, the little open-top ‘Rabbit’ was a common sight in many a sunshine state. Its global popularity meant that it even outlasted its hard-top sibling and VW’s second-generation Golf. Fans of wind-in-the-hair dub motoring would have to wait for the Mk3 Golf for their next fix. Just before that though, the Mk1 Cabriolet was sent out in style…







