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SyncroFest 2015

Bio:

GoWesty proudly presents... the Syncro Vanagon. Here it is shown in its natural habitat. All footage in the video shot by: Corey from Where's My Office Now? http://wheresmyofficenow.com/


This video, shot during SyncroFest 2015 shows what the GoWesty “Trainer Van” is capable of doing, even in the hands of a relatively inexperienced driver. NOTE: The route taken in this video (also referred to as the “line chosen”) is not how we recommend driving your Syncro. This type of terrain is best attacked in granny gear at a low, controlled speed.

 


 

Vehicle:

Produced in Germany and sold in America from 1986 to 1991, the Syncro Vanagon, a four-wheel-drive version of the standard, boxy 1980's Vanagon, is now exceedingly rare, and rarer still are the camper models -- the fully outfitted pop-top version made by Westfalia in Germany and the hardwood-trimmed models modified by Adventurewagen or Country Homes in the United States. The Syncro has a military-inspired undercarriage and a jacked-up drive train with a special gear for climbing hills; on the camper models attachments fold out, slide out and pop up to create sleeping space. 

The Syncro's origins go back to the late 1970's when two Volkswagen engineers, dreaming of a vehicle they could use to camp and travel to remote places like the Sahara desert, built some prototypes. In the mid-1980's, Steyr-Daimler-Puch, manufacturer of a legendary military off-road vehicle called the Pinzgauer, teamed up with Volkswagen to design and manufacture the Syncro. 

In many ways, it was a groundbreaking ground pounder. An independently suspended four-wheel-drive system gave it excellent ground clearance and kept all four wheels planted in challenging terrain. A locking system gave it tanklike traction by preventing any one wheel from breaking free and spinning. A viscous coupler, now a common device, automatically engaged the four-wheel-drive in response to any slippage in the rear wheels. Many of the inventions found in the Syncro have since made their way into vehicles like the Subaru Outback and Volkswagen's own S.U.V., the Touareg. 

But it was the camper model that truly distinguished the Syncro. In it you could keep food fresh in a small refrigerator, cook it on a two-burner stove, wash the dishes in a stainless-steel sink with water from a 13-gallon tank, store gear in a series of cabinets and sleep four people comfortably. The little-known Syncro camper was a back country mobile home, the ultimate expression of a sport utility vehicle before the term was even coined. 






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