Back in the 50s, the BMW was facing bankruptcy, but a microcar pulled the company back in black, and spurred one of the greatest comebacks in automotive history ...
Every now and then, a car comes along that looks less like transportation and more like something that fell out of the sky straight into a Kansas cornfield. In the years after World War II, when fuel ...
Micro-cars are cute and always put a smile on the faces of those who bump into them. The BMW Isetta checks that box, despite its fridge-like appearance. Its ovoid shape and bubble-like windows sent it ...
The Isetta is a funny little city car that was produced by BMW from 1955-1962. Based on a model of the same name originally produced by Italian manufacturer Iso, it had a one-cylinder motorcycle ...
While tiny by modern standards, the microcar proved reliable, affordable, and immensely popular.
Arguably the best-known microcar—basically the smallest category of car you can get—the Italian-designed 1950s-era Isetta has been reborn as an urban runabout with a 21st century electric powertrain.
For those used to flipping through these pages and finding a familiar make and model on each page, an introduction may finally be in order. This is the BMW Isetta 300... or more accurately, a heavily ...
The Isetta was an Italian designed microcar that was licensed to other manufacturers, most notably BMW. You may also remember it as TV-character Steve Urkel’s car from Family Matters. The car’s ...
BMW retells the incredible story of Klaus-Günter Jacobi and his efforts to help his best friend make it to West Berlin in the 1960s. Kyle Hyatt (he/him/his) hails originally from the Pacific Northwest ...
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