Thanks to fellow members of the Manx Dune Buggy Club , I went from knowing virtually nothing about my 2004 purchase of an aqua beach buggy titled as a "1965 VW Roadster" to discovering a treasure trove of historical information that makes for a great story!
Bruce Meyers started the dune buggy industry in 1964 when he designed a fiberglass dune buggy and started producing the Meyers Manx. Soon thereafter, in order to make the buggies more marketable and affordable, he redesigned the Manx bodies to fit on shortened VW floor pans and when magazines like Hot Rod and Car & Driver featured the fiberglass car on their covers, they took the country by storm.
In 1967, after Steve McQueen won his favorite lead role as Thomas Crown in the original production of the United Artists film The Thomas Crown Affair, for which he earned $750,000, and apparently aware of how well the Manx dune buggy performed on the beach, decided he wanted to use a souped-up Manx buggy in the beach racing scenes with co-star Faye Dunaway (who bravely remained seated at his side), rather than a Jeep as the script called for. The film was released on June 18, 1968 and aside from the Academy Award-winning song "The Windmills of Your Mind", it helped further boost the dune buggy industry as all of the driving scenes and stunts were done by McQueen himself in the buggy he had customized, known as the Queen Manx (which indeed started out as a Meyers Manx kit purchased from B.F. Meyers & Co.).
Click on the movie poster to see much more material regarding the movie and the Thomas Crown buggy
In fact, shortly thereafter, you could order dune buggy bodies produced in ten "groovy" colors - from the SEARS catalog!
Click on the
image below to view articles, courtesy of Popular Science (1969)

The Thomas Crown buggy (Queen Manx) is born...
McQueen customized his own version of the Meyers Manx dune buggy design that became known as the Queen Manx, and contracted with Con-Ferr Manufacturing in Burbank, California to modify a Meyers Manx body purchased from B.F. Meyers & Co.
The conversion was finished in eight weeks and included:
● A 4-barrel 140 HP Corvair engine (since the Porsche engine he had originally specified was proclaimed to be too expensive)
● Engine adaptor made by Ted Trevor to mate the swing-axle VW transaxle (with a flipped ring & pinion) to the Corvair engine
● Special extra-wide rear wheels cast by American Racing that were produced to accommodate the Firestone racing tires from Andy Granatelli's STP Special (#40) turbine car (which almost won the 1967 Indy 500)
● Very unique headlamp scoops that accommodated the smaller 5¾" DOT approved 12-volt headlamps
● Marine-style windshield fabrication and rails
● Custom waffle stitched Naugahyde seats and interior trim by Tony Nancy using Datsun Fairlady seat frames
● Elongated side panels to eliminate the need for side pods; Bruce Meyers never incorporated this feature, since it prevented the bodies from being stackable
● A Con-Ferr nameplate on the hood replacing the Meyers Manx badge
Pete Condos, test driving the first
Queen Manx in the hills surrounding Burbank, prior to delivery to Steve
McQueen

courtesy of the First Steve McQueen site
Jon Harting reveals more details [clarified by Dan Adkins, based on feedback from Bruce Meyers]:
"I helped build the Queen Manx dune buggy that Steve drove in the Thomas Crown Affair. I worked as a mechanic at Con-Ferr Mfg. Co. from 1967 to 1968. It is gone now, but was at 300 N. Victory Boulevard in Burbank, CA. We manufactured 4-wheel drive accessories and sold new Toyota Land Cruisers with new Chevrolet engines. Somehow we were tasked by Pete Condos, the owner, to build this dune buggy. "
"I bought a 1966 Corvair engine from a wrecking yard and brought it back to the shop and steam cleaned it. We attached it to a VW transaxle that was in a VW chassis. The body was custom [
builtmodified] in our shop. I remember Steve coming by to look at its progress on two occasions. Both times he drove a red Maserati roadster. He was real nice to all of us there. After the movie came out, we built similar [probably Manx-Vair] dune buggies for Connie Stevens and Dick Smothers. Dick even came every day and watched us build his."
Note camera mounted over the hood as
McQueen and Dunaway
prepare for a beach scene at Crane Beach in Ipswich, Massachusetts




Above photos, courtesy of MGM Studios
Manx-Vair chassis
Con-Ferr
subsequently produced one or two more
Corvair powered replicas of the
Queen Manx and, as evidenced in the brochure shown below, they did
attempt to market their kits as well, pairing each modified Meyers Manx
body with a chassis that was fabricated in-house, rather than with shortened
"used" VW floor pans of unknown origin. In fact, Con-Ferr teamed up with
B.F. Meyers & Co. in 1968 and produced the chassis for
Manx-Vair kits,
which had special body modifications to accommodate a complete Corvair
rear end (engine, transaxle and suspension) and could be ordered for
either Corvair (CC serial numbers) or VW (CV serial numbers) front
suspension configurations.

Click to learn more regarding the Queen Manx
The HUNTER Dune Buggy
The only mass-produced clone of the Thomas Crown
buggy
In 1969, Universal Fiberglas in Scarborough, Ontario started producing Hunter Dune Buggy bodies which closely mimicked the Queen Manx design. In fact, the sketch and photos used in the marketing brochure were of the original Queen Manx, even though the end product incorporated an integral dash panel and a Manx-style windshield, rather than the marine-style shown. This allowed the dune buggy to be street-legal by not only accommodating DOT-approved safety glass, but the windshield wiper assembly from the donor car as well.As with most other fiberglass dune buggy kits of that era, it was assumed that the chassis, power train and most other components would originate from a VW Beetle donor vehicle as well. Since the headlight scoops occupied a good portion of the space normally allocated to the VW fuel tank in the Queen Manx, a special fuel tank was required. The Hunter body mold was designed to address this issue by shifting the tank placement rearward such that a Type-1 tank invades some of the passenger compartment space behind the dash panel.
My understanding is that only 30 Hunter kits were produced, before moving onto to other better selling VW-based fiberglass kits like the Centurion GT.


In 1993, a gentleman from Sarnia, Ontario rescued the Hunter Dune Buggy that I've acquired (then 24-years old) and began restoration by upgrading a 1965 VW Beetle Type-1 chassis with new floor pans, a new roll-bar cage, a ball-joint front-end, and an IRS rear-end. Then a rebuilt 1971 era 1600 dual-port VW engine was installed. Engine upgrades include Type-3 Solex carbs which are much shorter and a remote oil filtering system which has the added benefit of lowering oil temperature.
Holes in the dash panel where instrument gauges were originally installed were all filled back in and an instrument cluster pod was incorporated to neatly replace their function, while still retaining the old-school look.
OVER 45-YEARS OLD!!
I became the proud owner of this rare street-legal buggy in June 2004 and absolutely enjoy driving and tinkering with it. Some items of note that are not of Volkswagen origin:

● 1968 Hillman Hunter nameplate
● 1969 Oldsmobile Cutlass 14" SS wheels
● 1977 Honda Civic instrument cluster pod
● 1993 Ford urethane paint - Aqua
● 1971 Chevrolet Vega tail lamps
● 1971 Honda CB750 front signal lamps
● 1991 Chevrolet Cavalier Z-24 seats
● 1969 Dodge Charger flip-up gas cap
The dune buggy draws a lot of attention, even in the annual Woodward Dream Cruise, since there aren't many vintage buggies being driven in Michigan, and McQueen's design modifications like the unique sculpted headlamp scoops really sets it apart from other buggies. As a result of owning this modified Beetle, I can't help but be a MVVC enthusiast of all vintage air-cooled Volkswagens and the many kit-car derivatives.

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