According to the Meyers Manx website, the buggy kit presently starts at $5,995, and all-electric Manx 2.0 EV is also in development. Speaking of the body, it's available in the buyer's choice of 18 solid colors, or a whopping 46 hues of metal flake for an extra cost. There are improvements over vintage models, too, including a spacious locking storage compartment, and chases for wiring integrated into the body. Of all the dune buggies on this list, the Meyers Manx is the only brand-new buggy that you can still buy in kit form and assemble yourself. The reinvented company was sold again in 2020, and remains operational today. Though shuttered since 1971, Bruce Meyers brought his namesake company back to life in the year 2000. In total, approximately 6,000 original Manx are said to have been produced. Although Bruce Meyers had properly patented his invention, the patent was later rescinded in court, allowing the copycats to continue. The official public debut of the car comes on August 19, and reservations will open on the company’s website after that debut.The popularity of the Meyers Manx inspired many copycat designs. A small car with a small battery should be reasonably priced, but given that it’s low-production from a new company and may include some pricey materials (the roof, at least, is carbon fiber, though we don’t know the body material), it could go either way.īut even though the company hasn’t released pricing information, it plans to start taking reservations next week. Deliveries of the Meyers Manx 2.0 start in earnest in 2024.ĭespite this early timeline, Meyers has not yet released pricing information. As a new company, it wants to get feedback from these early owners to make sure everything is going right – and the car will be capable of over-the-air updates to respond to this early feedback. Meyers says it plans to ship 50 examples of the car as a “beta program” in 2023, which is surprisingly soon. And there’s some room under the hood, but it’s taken up by a spare tire and tool kit.Īnd yet, as a low-volume manufacturer, the car should still be street legal under US regulations. There’s a cargo area in the back that can be accessed by tilting the roof forward (which you can see in this Instagram reel), but it’s not lockable. The roof is removable, but if you want to go topless, you need to leave the roof at home. We now produce the Manxter and Kick-Out kits, modern. It has no doors or side windows, just an open area to slide into the cockpit. Meyers & Co., is the original producer of fiberglass dune buggy kits. We don’t know how quick the 20kWh version will be, but in a tiny electric dune buggy, we’re sure it will feel plenty quick anyway.Īs for practical features, this is a true dune buggy and doesn’t come with many of the things we’d expect from a car. The Manx will be driven by two rear motors, and the company says the 40kWh version can do 0–60 in 4.5 seconds with 202hp and 240 lb-ft of torque. Though, the vehicle is less aerodynamic and has less-efficient knobby off-road tires. That’s about a third of the weight of a normal full-size vehicle and a full ton lighter than the 40kWh Leaf. The Manx will only weigh around 1,500lbs, or 1,650lbs for the larger battery. These range numbers seem high given that the 40kWh Leaf gets 150 miles of range, but since the Meyers Manx 2.0 is much smaller than a normal electric car, it should be more efficient. The car can be charged at 6kW on AC power or 60kW at a DC fast charger (as an option) – low compared to modern EVs, but with a smaller battery, it should still charge plenty quickly. Currently the company is planning two different battery options, 20kWh and 40kWh, which it says will be capable of 150 and 300 miles of range. The car was designed by Freeman Thomas, who designed the Audi TT and the modern VW New Beetle.Īs for specs, like most early looks at electric cars, they may well change before the car comes out. Instead, it will come fully assembled from the manufacturer with a design aesthetic similar to the original Meyers Manx but modernized (and with a very cool retro dash). BUGGY concept, which was based on the original Manx, Meyers is planning to bring the new electric Manx 2.0 into production. The new company, Meyers Manx, LLC, has now introduced an updated and fully electric version of the buggy, which was unveiled this weekend in Malibu. The company was sold to venture capital firm Trousdale in 2020. Bruce Meyers, the founder, brought the company back in 1999 and showed off an electric prototype in 2014. It was popular in desert racing in the 60s, though the company folded in 1971. The original Manx, the first “dune buggy,” was a kit car, built on a modified VW Beetle chassis with a fiberglass body kit. The Meyers Manx, the iconic 1960s dune buggy, is returning as the new all-electric Meyers Manx 2.0.
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