Oh, man! When I was a child we moved to the UK from San Francisco. Our first car in Birmingham was a red, 175cc Heinkel. A '59, I think? My dad wedged a pair of Lotus Elite buckets in it, so I could sit in the back. It was a bit of a squeeze for 3, so after a couple of years he traded it in on a Renault Dauphine. The Heinkel had amazing acceleration up to about 40 mph, then ran out of steam. Believe it or not, we vacationed all over Britain in the little bugger. Thank you for bringing back a piece of my childhood!
BTW, my dad ran a music store in Birmingham. One of his idiot friends always insisted popping the roof open, so he could ride standing up. With a comb held over his lip, he would do his best Hitler imitation, saluting madly as they putted along in downtown traffic. Strangely, this drew a lot of smiles in post-war Britain...
We were poor as church mice when we first arrived, so vacations were day trips for a while. Also, the Heinkel had a slightly longer passenger compartment than an Isetta. It was later replaced by a Renault Dauphine, which had a comparatively huge frunk…
I bought a new Heinkel in 1959 colour light blue. The brakes were good, the steering very positive and the engine reliable. I recall it was the 197cc four stroke. There were shims under each valve spring and it could easily return 60mpg and carry two people with luggage or two small children all in the days before seat belts. Excellent fold back sun roof. All nicely put together. I just wish I had kept it.
The Heinkel Kabine (pronounced like "ka-'bee-ne") should have either a 175 or a 200 cc engine. These air-cooled engines were slightly modified from the Heinkel scooters and are very solidely built and reliable. I did a tour with my Heinkel scooter (175 cc) with a second passenger on the back seat from Germany, crossing the Alps, down to the Mediterranian, some 3000 km, with no technical problems at all. These engines are really easy to service, repair, and to keep alive.
When I worked in the UK in the late 1960s, there was a guy who drove a Trojan 200 to work. I used to see it every day. The Trojan 200 was an Irish-built Heinkel, virtually identical to this car.
Thank you for showing all the details. That Isetta steering wheel/column attached to the front door with universal joints was covered by a patent--so Heinkel couldn't use it.
Thanks for a fun video. Would like to suggest you point the camera in different directions inside the car so we can see. For example: looking out the back window, looking up through the bubble, etc. Also, you could mount the camera behind you pointing forward. Lastly, finding a road where you can really get up to speed and maintain it.
Tuve un Heinkel 198 cc eb 1960, hecho en Argentina, realicè viajes de 400 km. con el, debido al transito actual, es un poco peligroso su uso en rutas rapidas, no por su calidad y marcha, sino por las velocidades y tamaños de los nuevos automoviles y camiones que circulan
What fun to see this road test pop up today! The other day I was watching a video, by a Mr. HubNut, who drove the British version of this car (same color), the Trojan. It had a 10HP, 198cc motor, w/ the same controls, but reversed for RHD...
BTW Heinkel built scooters too, using the same engine. They were very reliable and used to be around well into the 1960‘s. As was said before, Messerschmitt also built a Kabinenroller, BMW built the Isetta (originally a Italian design). Dornier also built a microcar, the Dornier Delta. AFAIK there were only prototypes built, as the production would be too expensive. There was the Goggomobil, Isetta, Goliath, Zündapp Janus and Kleinschnittger around, so the market was already competitive and Dornier would have joined too late and at too high prices. They instead went to Spain and designed and built aircraft (Do 25, which would evolve into Do 27).
I remember these cars from my childhood in Holland, like the BMW, the Goggomobil. The days the German Mark was cheap, they were working to get Germany back on it's feet. Like our hotwater system was a Juncker geiser haha, the former Stuka aircraft company. While for those who could buy real cars then, they bought, Jaguar, Wolseley, Riley or a Sunbeam, or even a Rover. Those days are gone, it has been turnes around completely
Our chemistry teacher had one of these. One day as he was waiting to turn into the main road, some of us (not me) lifted up the rear so the drive wheel left the road and when he revved it up they let it drop. Pow! Straight out into the road! Fortunately (deliberately?) there was nothing coming.
Im pretty sertain that this is the same Heinkel i sawed from the yunkyard in Gothenbourg Sweden in the 90s Toyota white, made a new boble in the back that was difficult. Sounds terrible now, should be smoth. Was made for a clothing company named Solo for display/ event. Best regards Per Lundin (56)
cool little car , there's one for sale at the moment in new zealand start price $25,000 nz thats why i searched youtube to check them out , they look advanced for the year they were made , they must of caused a real commotion when they were released
Be careful on cornering. Whereas the Isetta would slide across the road if cornered too fast, the Heinkel was more likely to roll over. It was popular in the UK, built under licence as the Trojan 200. After a while they seemed to disappear from the roads while many Isettas were still around. I put that down to being written off after roiling over, but I'm only guessing.
My Grandmother had one and rolled it one night. A passing truck driver helped her roll it back up, and she got home with the rear "glass" (it is plastic) in the back, saying "the bubble has popped!" We popped it back in and it was fine. My Dad sold it and bought a Mk1 Cortina Estate GT - I guess their incomes improved around 1962!
Yours is 175 cc.. single wheelers were smaller displacement, the four wheelers had 200 cc... And much faster. The gearbox is non synchro and takes a bit to get used to.. the 200cc in tune will do 50... Mine almost 60 !!
I love all your little cars, but you need to invest in a GoPro and mount it on your head so you don't have to hold your camera or phone, whatever you film with.
Tuve 2 , uno rojo y otro con el color de fábrica gris, todavia tengo un tablero impecable completo con velocímetro y reloj, si alguien lo precisa me avisa y podemos llegar a un acuerdo.
It's begging for a modern scooter engine and automatic transmission. Keep the original engine and transmission in a display case. Also, that wiring.... ouch!
I'd go to a 'CVT' if possible...or at the least a liquid-cooled Honda engine. That should be 'doable' w/a custom removable 'engine-mount' so the original engine could be re-installed if ever wanted. ( who cares about 'tampering' if it's not really drive-able? I want to drive it...not just 'stare at it and wish it ran well enough to do 55 or so' ) There are plenty of these in 'pristine original condition' in museums and collections...I want mine on the road!
@@gerrynightingale9045 yeah but the brakes.... and the cvt+engine case might have the rear wheel stick too far back out. sounds like a nightmare for a car that's already barely driveable by design.
@@comethiburs2326 I don't see an 'engine-swap' as a huge problem...and my Honda scooter stops fine w/drum-brakes, even with my fat-ass on it! The 'CVT' might be too much, but if possible to do it without damaging the original structure, I would do it.
@@gerrynightingale9045 it's going to be a package problem, unless you can find a 250cc or more vertical scooter engine running on 8"s. any bigger/horizontal engine will poke out of the trunk.
@@comethiburs2326 I see no insurmountable problem in replacing an engine in a vehicle which already possesses an engine of the same characteristics as the original...they are both internal-combustion, and both will have all the same principles involved with the transmission of movement. ( a modern 4-stroke Honda of 250cc's is vastly more reliable with greater 'torque' factors than a 65-year-old 'bang-bang smoker' of the same displacement...if that were not true, then all engines/transmission would still be *exactly the same* in all respects and they are *not* )
Not realy. In german a cabin is a hut ( Uncle Toms cabin/ Onkel Toms Hütte). Kabine in german means the passenger room of a plane or ship. Side note : Hitler ( in standard german Hüttler) means: A man living in a hut/ cabin.
It's a scooter rear end, amazing technology. I had the UK (Slought assembled) Trojan version. the name change was because most people didn't like the name Heinkel, remembering the He 111 that tried to flatten London 15 years earlier.
Oh, man! When I was a child we moved to the UK from San Francisco. Our first car in Birmingham was a red, 175cc Heinkel. A '59, I think? My dad wedged a pair of Lotus Elite buckets in it, so I could sit in the back. It was a bit of a squeeze for 3, so after a couple of years he traded it in on a Renault Dauphine. The Heinkel had amazing acceleration up to about 40 mph, then ran out of steam. Believe it or not, we vacationed all over Britain in the little bugger. Thank you for bringing back a piece of my childhood!
BTW, my dad ran a music store in Birmingham. One of his idiot friends always insisted popping the roof open, so he could ride standing up. With a comb held over his lip, he would do his best Hitler imitation, saluting madly as they putted along in downtown traffic. Strangely, this drew a lot of smiles in post-war Britain...
Where did you put the luggage?
We were poor as church mice when we first arrived, so vacations were day trips for a while. Also, the Heinkel had a slightly longer passenger compartment than an Isetta. It was later replaced by a Renault Dauphine, which had a comparatively huge frunk…
I bought a new Heinkel in 1959 colour light blue. The brakes were good, the steering very positive and the engine reliable. I recall it was the 197cc four stroke. There were shims under each valve spring and it could easily return 60mpg and carry two people with luggage or two small children all in the days before seat belts. Excellent fold back sun roof. All nicely put together. I just wish I had kept it.
I know , right ?
The Heinkel Kabine (pronounced like "ka-'bee-ne") should have either a 175 or a 200 cc engine. These air-cooled engines were slightly modified from the Heinkel scooters and are very solidely built and reliable. I did a tour with my Heinkel scooter (175 cc) with a second passenger on the back seat from Germany, crossing the Alps, down to the Mediterranian, some 3000 km, with no technical problems at all. These engines are really easy to service, repair, and to keep alive.
@@MrThetaphi True, but a totally different bubble car from the Isetta under review in this video.
Thanks for showing these cars and showing how they drive.
Heinkel und Messerschmidt
Two of biggest aircraft manufacturers in Germany turned into building aircraft cars after war to survive.( Even BMW too)
I think Kabine is Cabin in English and pronounced Kabina (kabeena) from German. I wish these cars were still produced.
Correct: kha-bee-nuh"
When I worked in the UK in the late 1960s, there was a guy who drove a Trojan 200 to work. I used to see it every day. The Trojan 200 was an Irish-built Heinkel, virtually identical to this car.
That is a gem of a car, I grew up with 2CV's (love 'em still) . Fun vid!
Tuve 1. Lo armé mientras estaba en la Facultad. Ahora lo extraño, lo vendí barato pero disfruté mucho esa venta.
nice. you show the coolest cars
Thank you for showing all the details. That Isetta steering wheel/column attached to the front door with universal joints was covered by a patent--so Heinkel couldn't use it.
Yo tuve uno, pase de andar en moto a tener este autorizado, me trae buenos recuerdos. Un saludo desde Uruguay.
Thanks for a fun video. Would like to suggest you point the camera in different directions inside the car so we can see. For example: looking out the back window, looking up through the bubble, etc. Also, you could mount the camera behind you pointing forward. Lastly, finding a road where you can really get up to speed and maintain it.
Great to see this! It reminds me of my first run in the Heinkel I restored back in the 1970s in the UK. I wonder where 689 PMG is now?
Super, Thank you
the Heinkel Kabine 150 has 174ccm with 9,3 PS
153 198ccm with 10 PS
Tuve un Heinkel 198 cc eb 1960, hecho en Argentina, realicè viajes de 400 km. con el, debido al transito actual, es un poco peligroso su uso en rutas rapidas, no por su calidad y marcha, sino por las velocidades y tamaños de los nuevos automoviles y camiones que circulan
What fun to see this road test pop up today! The other day I was watching a video, by a Mr. HubNut, who drove the British version of this car (same color), the Trojan. It had a 10HP, 198cc motor, w/ the same controls, but reversed for RHD...
That thing is cool as heck! Reminds me of my very first car the NSU Prinz. The glass area is amazing!
Wow ! what a greater sounding little engine.Nice car.
Thanks for the uploading.love to have one.Cheers.
Think the name prounounced in German would be Ka-BEE-na.
German for cabin. pronounced cabeener .
Kabine is spoken Kabine in german!
BTW Heinkel built scooters too, using the same engine. They were very reliable and used to be around well into the 1960‘s. As was said before, Messerschmitt also built a Kabinenroller, BMW built the Isetta (originally a Italian design). Dornier also built a microcar, the Dornier Delta. AFAIK there were only prototypes built, as the production would be too expensive. There was the Goggomobil, Isetta, Goliath, Zündapp Janus and Kleinschnittger around, so the market was already competitive and Dornier would have joined too late and at too high prices. They instead went to Spain and designed and built aircraft (Do 25, which would evolve into Do 27).
drop a Yamaha R1 engine in there. first bubble sleeper. lol
Someone dropped in a Honda 900 cc
Sweet! The engine sounds good in the video. Looks like fun.
That thing would be fun to drive, it should be daily driven, it deserves lot of love just for what it is.
Why didn't you drive with roof open?
I remember these cars from my childhood in Holland, like the BMW, the Goggomobil. The days the German Mark was cheap, they were working to get Germany back on it's feet. Like our hotwater system was a Juncker geiser haha, the former Stuka aircraft company. While for those who could buy real cars then, they bought, Jaguar, Wolseley, Riley or a Sunbeam, or even a Rover. Those days are gone, it has been turnes around completely
Our chemistry teacher had one of these. One day as he was waiting to turn into the main road, some of us (not me) lifted up the rear so the drive wheel left the road and when he revved it up they let it drop. Pow! Straight out into the road! Fortunately (deliberately?) there was nothing coming.
Nice post-war car. Good video!
Im pretty sertain that this is the same Heinkel i sawed from the yunkyard in Gothenbourg Sweden in the 90s Toyota white, made a new boble in the back that was difficult. Sounds terrible now, should be smoth.
Was made for a clothing company named Solo for display/ event.
Best regards Per Lundin (56)
"JANE !!!! Stop this Crazy-Thing !!!"😫 lol
Very cool! So similar to the Isetta yet so different!
cool little car , there's one for sale at the moment in new zealand start price $25,000 nz thats why i searched youtube to check them out , they look advanced for the year they were made , they must of caused a real commotion when they were released
Surely, the cable brake on the rear wheel is the parking brake?
The English made version was named Trojan. _Trojan Way_ in Croydon, London is named after it.
great to see these interesting old cars in action 👍
Nice video. These are really expensive today here in Germany!
Hey man, do you have also a Fiat 500?😃
Be careful on cornering. Whereas the Isetta would slide across the road if cornered too fast, the Heinkel was more likely to roll over. It was popular in the UK, built under licence as the Trojan 200. After a while they seemed to disappear from the roads while many Isettas were still around. I put that down to being written off after roiling over, but I'm only guessing.
My Grandmother had one and rolled it one night. A passing truck driver helped her roll it back up, and she got home with the rear "glass" (it is plastic) in the back, saying "the bubble has popped!" We popped it back in and it was fine. My Dad sold it and bought a Mk1 Cortina Estate GT - I guess their incomes improved around 1962!
They also used to catch fire a lot.
The Mini came along, not much more expensive. That was the death knell for microcars. Worth a small fortune these days, even as a rusty barn find....
Hi, Great video. Is it possible to use some of it? You will be credited / tagged. Thanks, Tom
Nice Car,It would be so fun,on a sunday afternoon!!
Manteb mbah motuba ne.. gejil tersepona mbah.. 👍
You need more cameras it would be nice to see outside shots as you drive.
I know I do, someday when I make it big
@@2stroketurbo your making it big from here. I wasn't trying to be a jerk. Hell maybe I was idk.
Sticking rings or what would cause it to smoke?
I'd like one, bring them back
That's a beautiful little car👍😎
where do you get these wonderful vehicles? this is awesome. i want one but probably way out of my range.🍻
Just keep looking , they pop up.
Online auctioning sites, from used car lots to Craigslist. Certain sites have “self pick-up”
That thing would fit on or in a lot of things
I cannot imaging many things scarier than driving that thing at 100 kph!
can i do delivery with this, because i found as cheap?
Gostei do heinkel kabine road test
Smaller custom steering wheel?
Yours is 175 cc.. single wheelers were smaller displacement, the four wheelers had 200 cc... And much faster. The gearbox is non synchro and takes a bit to get used to.. the 200cc in tune will do 50... Mine almost 60 !!
I had a Heinkel Ireland I restored in the 90’s. 200cc & 3 wheels. Got mine up to 60 mph on the speedo.
Wow this bubble car is Fantastic.
What was that buzzing noise?
Kah-been-uh would be an approximation of the German pronunciation of “Kabine.”
1:27... = NOT ladies first...and that's Okay! 🙂
I have known the Messerschmidt Kabinenroller, but did not know that heinkel built something like that...
Heinkel tried to compete with Messerschmitt
It was also built under licence, by a company called Trojan, in Croydon England
What! No air con?
Jay Leno bought it?
I love all your little cars, but you need to invest in a GoPro and mount it on your head so you don't have to hold your camera or phone, whatever you film with.
how much are these things worth? I'm only asking because I can't find one that's sold or is for sale.
A small fortune.
Still better than a trebant
Tuve 2 , uno rojo y otro con el color de fábrica gris, todavia tengo un tablero impecable completo con velocímetro y reloj, si alguien lo precisa me avisa y podemos llegar a un acuerdo.
Germany must make a new version of it.But with the nice old design
As a matter of fact, a company from Switzerland is making a copy of the Isetta, but with electro-engine.
It's begging for a modern scooter engine and automatic transmission. Keep the original engine and transmission in a display case. Also, that wiring.... ouch!
I'd go to a 'CVT' if possible...or at the least a liquid-cooled Honda engine. That
should be 'doable' w/a custom removable 'engine-mount' so the original engine
could be re-installed if ever wanted.
( who cares about 'tampering' if it's not really drive-able? I want to drive it...not
just 'stare at it and wish it ran well enough to do 55 or so' ) There are plenty of these in 'pristine original condition' in museums and collections...I want mine
on the road!
@@gerrynightingale9045 yeah but the brakes.... and the cvt+engine case might have the rear wheel stick too far back out. sounds like a nightmare for a car that's already barely driveable by design.
@@comethiburs2326 I don't see an 'engine-swap'
as a huge problem...and my Honda scooter
stops fine w/drum-brakes, even with my fat-ass on it! The 'CVT' might be too much, but
if possible to do it without damaging the
original structure, I would do it.
@@gerrynightingale9045 it's going to be a package problem, unless you can find a 250cc or more vertical scooter engine running on 8"s. any bigger/horizontal engine will poke out of the trunk.
@@comethiburs2326 I see no insurmountable problem in replacing an engine in a vehicle which already possesses an engine of the same characteristics as the original...they are both internal-combustion, and both will
have all the same principles involved with the transmission of movement.
( a modern 4-stroke Honda of 250cc's is vastly more reliable with greater 'torque' factors than a 65-year-old 'bang-bang smoker' of the same displacement...if that were not true, then all engines/transmission would still be *exactly the same* in all respects and they are *not* )
Soooo love it - show us the motor!
Did you try sitting in the back seat?
Kabine = Cabin
Heinkel, like Messerschmidt produced military aircrafts during WW2.
Heinkel kabine!!!! I have seen one în Deutsche museum munchen.
that ride was a blast,...!
What do you think top speed is on this car? Lol
Es un ovni pero con llantas.
Steam bath mobile, it's for cooler European climates........
*It means just as it sounds...'Cabin'*
Not realy. In german a cabin is a hut ( Uncle Toms cabin/ Onkel Toms Hütte). Kabine in german means the passenger room of a plane or ship. Side note : Hitler ( in standard german Hüttler) means: A man living in a hut/ cabin.
Have you ever seen this one again? Popped up for no reason today, thanks to RUclips's algorithms …
The cloth roof doesn't retract?
Only there in case of emergency and to cut production costs
what mpg get those small cars?
40-50mpg
My last name is Heinl. This car has to kin to me.
What a beauty.
i drive one of these
loser
loser
Winner
Well at least you can't bring home fat chicks.
عبد السلام النابلسي كان بيركب واحده شبها في الافلام
Ah… Fallout games.
If we were driven more little cars like this, global warming would not be a problem. How much gas is needed in it car to drive 100 km?
Yes.yes.no smoke 😊
Kabinenroller = Cabin scooter!
yep !
Toy or Car?
Car. Road legal!!!!
@@2stroketurbo Yeah I knew that Mark it's just so tiny I'd be scared 😬 and only 10 h.p. Not a practical car here in the States.
What rs
Ha ha ha "Fouled plugs"................there's only one. Ha ha ha ha......
It's a scooter rear end, amazing technology. I had the UK (Slought assembled) Trojan version.
the name change was because most people didn't like the name Heinkel, remembering the He 111 that tried to flatten London 15 years earlier.
Looks like a car fetus
hermoso
In German it's pronounced Ka- BEAN - a
I wish I have …🎵
to Herr Richtig not song.I was felt hop feeling.don't you feel having fun when you drive this car don't you?
to Herr Richtig By the way you owner?
to Herr Richtig I often meet ??words my hair and eyes is black.
to Herr Richtig FUJIYAMA is very beautiful.would you like come Japan? if when you having time.
Cuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuute
Lindo video pero demasiado hablado.
Нравится он мне
Nice commuter car as long as you stay off the freeway and away from semis.
Pronounce it like ca(r)-bee-ne(ver)
Road test ! ? oh.no no!!
Ca-bean-ah
Kah-bee-nah
Why leave a cardboard box in there when shooting video?
Roy LeMeur ....to quieten it more 😂
Guess what...