NSU Ro80 review. It arrived in 1967 and looked so futuristic but what's it like to drive one today?

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  • Опубликовано: 4 сен 2024
  • With its twin rotor Wankel engine and streamlined looks, the Ro80 was motorshow star when it arrived in 1967. It also marked the start of Audi, as you'll discover in this video.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @In_memory_of_Dad
    @In_memory_of_Dad Год назад +370

    Wow this was a review that really touched my heart. My late father had 2 NSU RO80's and for some reason he absolutely adored them? I know they were both later models and one of them had the wankel engine replaced for a Ford V4 which attached to the semi auto gearbox ran absolutely beautifully, the other had its original rotary engine. My father passed away in January this year and his passing has had a really bad effect on me, you think your Dad will always be around and when the day comes when he's suddenly not here anymore without warning or any indication the devastation is unbelievable, so seeing this review by Harry today on a car I would most associated with my father has really cheered me up and for the first time in a long time a little smile to go with it. Thanks Harry...👍🙂👍

    • @mediocreman2
      @mediocreman2 Год назад +6

      What do you mean for some reason? What's not to like?

    • @daniellarge9784
      @daniellarge9784 Год назад +15

      Your Dad had excellent taste.

    • @iainmcglynn833
      @iainmcglynn833 Год назад +5

      Rich kid 😂. May he never be forgotten like mine , mentioned daily for last 6 1/2 years ❤️

    • @rogerpritchard
      @rogerpritchard Год назад +7

      Your father had a unique car! How special was that! I understand how you feel, when things change. It's not easy but life continues. My father was my best friend also. Funny how cars become so special in our memories! Those were the days.

    • @gregmorgan8350
      @gregmorgan8350 Год назад +5

      Your dad had great taste. These cars were around when I was a kid, always intrigued me, and wondered what might have been if they’d managed to survive longer with more development…something like a 13B with a 5 speed box. Of course the rotary almost did Mazda in too so further development wasn’t necessarily the commercial answer, but would have been a cool car

  • @ichheissedamian
    @ichheissedamian Год назад +101

    Always been obsessed with those ever since seeing one in the Audi museum in Ingolstadt as a kid. My dad always told me how Ro80 drivers would greet each other by holding up as many fingers as they had replacement engines :D

    • @ichheissedamian
      @ichheissedamian Год назад +7

      @tecdessus Not to mention if you get into the double digits...

    • @steffenrosmus9177
      @steffenrosmus9177 Год назад +2

      ​@@ichheissedamian even more dangerous if you have use your feet too.

    • @steffenrosmus9177
      @steffenrosmus9177 Год назад +6

      Well, my father only had to use one finger😂😂😂😂 Guess you know what finger😂😂😂

  • @mikeg306
    @mikeg306 Год назад +196

    Nice to see unusual older cars for a change.

  • @oliverbrookes27
    @oliverbrookes27 Год назад +54

    A neighbour of my parents had one in the early 70s. To put the late 60s £2,100 new price into context, we lived in a typical early 1960s 3 bed semi on a new estate. My parents bought the house in 1965 and paid £2,300 for it.

  • @meloccom
    @meloccom Год назад +33

    Hi Harry, 1969 Ro80 owner here. You can smooth the changes between gears by double clutching, push it out of gear letting go of the lever, give it a rev, then place it in the lower gear. Takes a bit of practice to remember to not touch the gear lever between actions but makes a big difference to the smoothness of the change. The stalling at rest can also be overcome by a tuneup and adjusting the strength of take-up of the vacuum clutch which you adjust with the silver valve unit attached to the RH front inner fender.
    Thanks for the video, makes me want to take mine for a drive again and to get its paint issues resolved. Hello from Australia.

    • @sianwarwick633
      @sianwarwick633 7 месяцев назад

      You drive this in Australia - city or country ?

    • @meloccom
      @meloccom 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@sianwarwick633 I drive my Ro80 around the Southern Highlands of NSW.

  • @richardwollocombe6793
    @richardwollocombe6793 Год назад +67

    While it might be tempting to enjoy the higher viewer figures on the modern sports cars, Harry, please carry on pulling in the oddball cars such as this one. Really enjoyed learning about this innovative car.

    • @iainbradley2847
      @iainbradley2847 Год назад +1

      Yes indeed. As I recall the Ro 80 not only was Car of the Year it was one of the late cards in a Brooke Bond tea booklet, along with the Citroen SM ( I think ). One card in each 1/4 pound of tea. Only ever travelled in an optimistically named NSU 1200 TT. ( TT was the sport version, as Abarth or Gordini ).Rear engine but so much classier in feel than the VW Beetle and a lively looker - drew inspiration from the otherwise awful rear engine Chevrolet Corvair.

  • @tonykeogh6139
    @tonykeogh6139 Год назад +34

    My all time favourite car. To put things in perspective this car was launched 3 years BEFORE the Morris Marina. NSU were light years ahead in many ways but sadly like many others the financial success didn’t follow. Anyone remember Freddie Laker and his “walk on walk off” cheap transatlantic air service ? Twenty years before Ryanair and EasyJet etc.

  • @junkorbust9498
    @junkorbust9498 Год назад +42

    A time when car company executives were optimistic and willing to take chances. Love it.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Год назад

      if only Toyota made one of these wankels today

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 9 месяцев назад

      Risks indeed, they went bust and were swallowed up by VW (Audi at first).

  • @robinfoster7597
    @robinfoster7597 Год назад +108

    Wow Harry, this brought back memories! My Dad replaced his Aston Martin DBS6 Vantage, with a Ro80 (4 kids into an Aston just doesn't work!). I don't think the one you were driving was in very good health? - my over-riding memory of it was just how silent it was! Thanks for the show. Definiteley the best car show on the internet! Thank you. :)

    • @jean-charlesweyland129
      @jean-charlesweyland129 Год назад +11

      Sadly it's not very healthy, you should be able to put it in gear hold the brakes and turn the wheels without it stalling... otherwise it means your engine is tired. Still it was a great video as always !

    • @nigel.w
      @nigel.w Год назад +2

      @@markguppy2715 Man, those Audi coupes were a great drive back in the 1980s with a wonderful manual gear change. Today, they seem even more rare than the Audi Quattro.

    • @kize32
      @kize32 Год назад +1

      I hope it wasn't a key for key deal

    • @peterjansen-gs7vg
      @peterjansen-gs7vg Год назад

      Bought a 1975 Ro 80 about 8 years ago .Since then I drive it nearly every day. No problems at all. I will never sell the car. It has some thing special.

  • @lespignottes781
    @lespignottes781 Год назад +3

    My dad had a garage in Lewisham and he sold NSU as a main agent.
    The first RO80 came from Germany and to my dads two days before the motor show opened.
    The following day it went to the show.
    After the show it came back and my dad purchased it.
    We had friends who lived in Cornwall we went to see on our first trip.
    My dad driving it like he stole it.
    Everyone in the car except my dad was sick.
    It was a great looking car. When you consider you could still get a morris minor.
    Anyhow good times

  • @4cds14
    @4cds14 Год назад +91

    As a 59 year old this brings back memories, my Dad had exactly the same spec car in that blue from brand new & it received admiring looks from passers by, we had an orange car before. I would love to know the history of this one to see if it was ours. We travelled down through France, Germany, Austria to Italy to the Audi campsite on an epic holiday all those years ago towing a caravan all the way.

    • @diegocirilo1973
      @diegocirilo1973 Год назад +3

      and carry to you the wankel engine any trouble during your travels?

    • @4cds14
      @4cds14 Год назад +9

      @@diegocirilo1973 Hi Diego
      We had no trouble with either of the NSU RO80s we had as I remember but I was about 10 years old at the time but I do know Dad was aware that others had problems. The orange car was a colour of its time but the blue was a stunning car. I remember the day we all went to pick it up & trading in the orange one.

    • @diegocirilo1973
      @diegocirilo1973 Год назад +5

      thanks a lot for the information! I am phd in physics and mathematics, however my high school was technical (electromechanics and servomechanisms) consequently I like too much the cars with non conventional engines

    • @buickmclean8163
      @buickmclean8163 Год назад +5

      60 year old , I remember seeing one of these in a garage in 1971. Compared to a Ford Consul and the like , this really was ' Space Age ' .

    • @gregmorgan8350
      @gregmorgan8350 Год назад +2

      Hills must have been a challenge with the caravan and gappy torque curve…

  • @houtanarefi3325
    @houtanarefi3325 Год назад +38

    There was the time that Citroen and NSU were close to each other, They had a company named Comotor to produce Wankel engines, NSU used them on Ro80 and Citroen on GS birotor and M35, also they shared semi automatic idea, Citroen used semi automatics on DS and CX, also you can see other similarities like inboard brakes etc.

    • @TheSnurkyjt
      @TheSnurkyjt Год назад +5

      NSU never used Comotor engines.

  • @MichaelKingsfordGray
    @MichaelKingsfordGray Год назад +1

    I used a Mazda Capella Wankel engined car here in Australia. It was marvelous!

  • @artoo45
    @artoo45 Год назад +8

    In an era where cars have all the visibility of a duck blind, this airy, flowing design with its lovely greenhouse is a breath of fresh air. Looks as modern as the day it came out. Thanks for covering this amazing bit of automotive history.

  • @nigelbowater4649
    @nigelbowater4649 Год назад +4

    Loved the RO80 my father had one in white. I remember the stories of drivers waving their fingers at each other when passing to signify how many engines they had gone through.

  • @KARLMARKoffical
    @KARLMARKoffical Год назад +1

    Harry just joyrided a childhood favourite 😊

  • @mariolaubli3877
    @mariolaubli3877 Год назад +25

    Finally, Harry did my alltime- favourite car! I like how he really gives the revs to these rotors. The Ro80 is just a piece of art.

  • @nicklamb4546
    @nicklamb4546 Год назад +1

    Adored this as a 15 year old interested in becoming a car designer. Still think it is one of the most beautiful and well thought out cars ever. Thanks.

  • @carltwidle9046
    @carltwidle9046 Год назад +7

    I live in New Zealand. We had these nice cars on our car market in limited numbers. It was very expensive to buy. The design is fantastic. Way ahead of its time. Especially when looking at other cars of the time.

  • @mikeystravels9720
    @mikeystravels9720 Год назад +10

    Wow. I worked on these as a mechanic in an NSU dealership in the sixties and this review brings back so many memories. You must hold the shifter by the shift knob to activate the points in the knob or the clutch servo would not activate. The shifter had a slight rocking motion to it. That’s one of the big things I remember from road testing them.

  • @joshimitsu96
    @joshimitsu96 Год назад +8

    Make no mistake having a look at past cars makes great content. Great review.

  • @Wileylikethehawk
    @Wileylikethehawk Год назад +15

    I have an Austin Westminster made in the same year - and that thing might as well be science fiction in comparison. So modern looking!

    • @mantarayal
      @mantarayal Год назад +3

      That really puts this car in perspective!!!

    • @richardharrold9736
      @richardharrold9736 Год назад

      ​@@mantarayal or rather it puts into perspective how hopelessly backward BMC had become...

  • @ianbrown-zw8pz
    @ianbrown-zw8pz Год назад +7

    My father bought a Volkswagen K70 in the exact colour of the example in your video! A sort of deep yellowish gold hue. It was a 1.6 litre petrol and he loved it -although it replaced a Jaguar Mk2 3.4 litre. That was proving a bit thirsty in the '73 petrol crisis. The K70 was roomy, comfortable with massive, squashy front seats. It was reliable and economical over about eight years, then it started blowing out engine core plugs and VW dealers couldn't seem to effect a permanent cure. So he got rid after about three repair attempts. He bought an Alfa Sud after that but it began to rot almost immediately so I persuaded him to go SAAB! He was on his third 99 when he died suddenly in 1995.

    • @erikschimmel6223
      @erikschimmel6223 Год назад +1

      Nice personal story. I have my 4 Saab 99 and in 1970 my street friend his father was driving a RO80 in the same collour as here
      Aad your father passed away so Young and unexpected

  • @shelbynamels973
    @shelbynamels973 Год назад +1

    This is my enduring memory of driving a Ro 80. As Harry said, the car is a semi-automatic, meaning it has a shifter but no clutch pedal. The first time a drove one, I tried upshifting from first to second. With my hand on the gearstick, I stepped on what I thought was the clutch. What I did, in fact, was stomp the brake pedal, nearly putting myself and my passenger thru the windshield.
    Aahh, memories.

  • @arthurdardalis
    @arthurdardalis Год назад +37

    Love the Ro80, so advanced, the Audi 100 of 1982 was based on this shape, this car was quick for its day, it’s obvious that something is not right with the engine tuning

    • @Sinnerboy88
      @Sinnerboy88 Год назад +2

      I was going to say that it reminded me of an Audi 100.. for a 1967 car it definitely would have looked very futuristic, taking into consideration other cars from 1967.. I knew the moment I heard it that it was a rotary, just has that unmistakable rotary sound. I only owned one rotary car, a third generation Mazda RX-7. I sold it, much to my regret.. it was a rare special edition Japanese import. Speaking of Audi 100. My Father had two Audi 100s back when I was a kid. I think it probably was the first car I was ever in. He had a pale green metallic coloured one then the second one he got was like a strange sort of metallic orange/copper colour as I remember it. It was very unusual kind of colour.. I think it is called copper metallic. They were both the 2.1 5-cylinder.

  • @bertramspielt
    @bertramspielt Год назад +30

    I just saw a RO80 today! On the road, near Heidelberg in Germany, a very beautiful example in bright orange color. And now, Harry shows this car in his video... Perfect day!
    And he drives this RO80 quite sporty. 😉 The engine likes to rev, like no other engine of this period. Amazing was, back in the days, it was very smooth and quiet at high speed, not like this is example...
    Thanks for this amazing video!

  • @ranjanaluwihare1511
    @ranjanaluwihare1511 Год назад +4

    My father a civil engineer was obsessed with the rotary engine & wanted it! Unique machine! Thankyou Harry!

  • @TheMickvee
    @TheMickvee Год назад +1

    When I was a teen, my dad had a K70, whilst my best mate's dad had a Ro80. I loved going in the NSU. So smooth!

  • @daveswarbrick5576
    @daveswarbrick5576 Год назад +6

    My first job when i left school was in a garage that worked on RO 80's , the yard was always full on them waiting to be worked on,always low compression.Back in the day it was one car that really stood out,totally different from anything else at the time.

    • @galaxya7091
      @galaxya7091 4 месяца назад

      With the specific toolbox

  • @oliverfisher8480
    @oliverfisher8480 Год назад +2

    I have one. One of the things I remember when I first bought it was how unnatural it felt to change gear without using a clutch pedal. One night, not long after I bought it, I was pulling onto a dual carriageway and I accelerated hard off the slip road and went for a gear change. 15 years of driving gave me a second nature of changing gears using a clutch, only there was no clutch pedal! Let me tell you that the brakes on a RO80 are very good and that I’ve never been so terrified in my life!

  • @richardhale2117
    @richardhale2117 Год назад +4

    "A what?" is EXACTLY what I said when i saw the title. I've never heard of that car. Harry's channel is constantly entertaining.

  • @K2shadowfax
    @K2shadowfax Год назад +1

    In 1978 in BAOR, one chap had one of these...it was something else indeed! Most of us had the run of the mill VWs / BMVs / etc. One lad had a VW Porsche - very exotic! I had my first car - a Citroen 2CV, which I loved; then a Ford Taunus, which covered a lot of miles.! Some time later, I owned a K70, too, but not for too long! My best fun drive was a 432! lol

  • @pkpropertysolutionsltd701
    @pkpropertysolutionsltd701 Год назад +41

    Really a variety of content on your channel, you never know what to expect next

  • @tonyturner7800
    @tonyturner7800 Год назад +12

    To be nerdy, the first Ro-80s had twin plugs per chamber and were perkier - de-rated with just a single plug per chamber in later ones in search of better longevity, though I think no less thirsty. And oh dear, that gearbox on the press fleet car! I remember my dad brought home the Motor's early road test car, which would go from standstill to 80-ish, all in second, with just a turbine-like whoosh - very impressive. I don't remember it being so roley-poley, either! Still looks good, though.

    • @roadie3124
      @roadie3124 Год назад +2

      I had a Mazda Rx3 around 1976 - 1978. That had twin spark plugs too. It also had two distributors so that the second plugs could fire off a little after the first ones. The shape of the "combustion chamber" meant that combustion was very incomplete with one spark plug.

  • @IndaloMan
    @IndaloMan Год назад +16

    Dad got an NSU1000 back in the 70s. I recall it had two levers between the front seats for heater and choke. My mum was a very nervous driver and when she turned into our drive I would open the choke to make the car lurch forwards. She never figured out why it did that. #goodolddays

  • @buttguy
    @buttguy 5 месяцев назад +1

    I had a VW history book when I was a kid and the RO80 was hands down my favorite car in the whole book. It blew my mind that a car that still looked fairly modern even then in the early 90s was designed in the mid-60s. Learning about rotary engines when I was older made the car even more special. If I ever win the lottery, there will be at least one euro-spec RO80 in my garage.

  • @oldbenz3123
    @oldbenz3123 Год назад +1

    Lovely to see an Ro80 review. It seems pretty clear that although good cosmetically this example was not in the best mechanical health although Harry is undoubtedly too much of a gent to say so in his review. In period the Ro80 was actually complimented for its handling - the suspension on this one seems shot. Similarly, I am sure that the car should not fail to hold the idle when the car is held on the footbrake or that the gearbox should shriek like that. Doubtless all things that can be fixed with a bit of cash. I recall them when a boy in period when they held a bit of a fascination. I was particularly impressed when a neighbour took delivery of a new one in 1975 as they were then only available to special order in the UK at a considerable jump in price from previously. It did not occur to me then that it was probably unsold old stock from 1974 as the message that they were trouble had even reached this schoolboy. I had always fancied the idea of having one - possibly as a spiritual successor to the Citroen SM I used to own - but, even allowing for some mechancial tiredness in this example, Harry's review has made me realise I do not really want one.

  • @daniellarge9784
    @daniellarge9784 Год назад +8

    Such a timeless looking car. Love it.

  • @blastoboy2000
    @blastoboy2000 Год назад

    Thank you for the video, it brings back a long forgotten memory. Probably around 1976 I was in High School, and a friend's father had an NSU Wankel car. One evening he borrowed it, without permission, and our group took it out for various hi-jinks. It was parked for a time while we did I forget what, and when we returned, the battery had gone flat and the car would not start. We managed to cajole the assistance of someone who had a car and jumper cables, and all we needed to do was connect them to the battery and we would be saved. So where was the battery? Not in the engine compartment, we found. Nor was it in the boot. After a long mad panicked thorough search that would have done a drug enforcement agent proud, the battery was finally located under the rear passenger seat, and we were reprieved.

  • @AaronRandolphChen
    @AaronRandolphChen Год назад +18

    Thank you Harry for covering one of the most forgotten cars of the 60's and 70's. I was fascinated by the design when it was launched but have never ever seen one in the metal before. Fascinating video! Thanks again, Harry!

  • @josephclark2563
    @josephclark2563 Год назад +9

    It’s a product of an era when engineers ran car companies - not marketing people or customer clinics - absolutely loved the review - brought me back to my childhood along with all the other positive comments !!

    • @mariemccann5895
      @mariemccann5895 Год назад

      And this is the best they produce! PMSL

    • @georgebettiol8338
      @georgebettiol8338 Год назад

      Would not attribute the roll-out of the RO80 to the engineers. I can almost hear the NSU engineers "yelling" to the NSU marketting/bean counter folk: "..... it's not wise to release the RO80 with its inherent week point - i.e. the poor durability of the Wankel engine's rotor tip".
      Response from the NSU marketting/bean counter folk: ..... you engineers worry to much".

  • @peaktraveller
    @peaktraveller Год назад +10

    A blast from the past and still a pretty car. I didn't think they were noisy like this one.

  • @verdict1163
    @verdict1163 Год назад +3

    Now it's time to review an RX-7. : ) Have been waiting to hear Harry's thoughts on one ever since I picked up my third-gen. There have to be a few worthy examples rocking around Britain.

  • @WarrenStMan
    @WarrenStMan Год назад +17

    They were so advanced that most of the trade were scared of them ,when they failed people often used the v4 engine from the Corsair which was short enough to fit and was a bit more dependable. What a great car the Prinz tts was very engaging .

    • @stevemorse9102
      @stevemorse9102 Год назад +4

      That is what my Dad ended up doing (some firm in Essex did the conversion) but the car just wasn’t the same without the rotary engine and he got rid of it quite quickly afterwards having cost and absolute fortune to fix 😮

    • @pashakdescilly7517
      @pashakdescilly7517 Год назад +1

      I wonder if a Mazda rotary engine conversion would have worked

    • @stevemorse9102
      @stevemorse9102 Год назад +2

      @@pashakdescilly7517 The Mazda rotary engine of the time was certainly more reliable than the engine in the NSU. That said, there were probably loads of Ford V4s around at the time. So cheaper and easier, but probably not better 😕

  • @richardclarke376
    @richardclarke376 Год назад +1

    that is a gorgeous car. I remember them. Glad to see there's still one running

    • @djphilmanns
      @djphilmanns Год назад

      There’s around 50 taxed in the U.K.

  • @mediocreman2
    @mediocreman2 Год назад +11

    One of the cooler cars you have had on the show! Fascinating transmission and I'm sure you'd adjust to it.

  • @simonhodgetts6530
    @simonhodgetts6530 Год назад +54

    That was utterly fascinating! I’ve always been a big fan of the Ro80’s looks, but until now have never seen a video which explained properly how they drive. And on this basis, had I been wealthy enough to buy one when they were new, after a test drive, I think I’d have either bought an XJ6 or a Rover P6 - this looks awkward to drive, and as you rightly say, the gear change is especially odd! Thanks again!

    • @reitsmaassociates
      @reitsmaassociates Год назад +5

      Ditto, such futuristic looks but obviously to strange on the mechanicals - what a shame

    • @NielsKurstjens
      @NielsKurstjens Год назад +6

      The original new R0-80 at the time did not have these gearbox/transmission issues and was apart from the engine troubles, a much better engineered car as a Rover of Jaguar of that era. Additional issue was that the mechanics in the uk were not used to dealing with such advanced technology.

    • @bevan8477
      @bevan8477 Год назад

      Having insufficient money to buy this utter lemon while it was shiny gave you relative happiness while you had time to accumulate more money and it’s reputation had time to align with its reality.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Год назад

      This car destroyed NSU.
      I think in Germany, every time one Ro80 driver passed another, they would signal to each other, holding up some number of fingers to indicate how many times their engine had been replaced -- twice, three times, whatever.

    • @MrPaige222
      @MrPaige222 Год назад

      I don't understand to this day why ANYONE would buy a rotary engined car. Lackluster performance, deplorable economy and ridiculous reliability, oil leaking and burning issues, etc....
      How Mazda is still alive is a mystery.

  • @johndoedro
    @johndoedro Год назад +42

    Picked watching Harry’s garage, rather than church today.

  • @schnutchie
    @schnutchie 10 месяцев назад

    Really enjoyed riding along in this gorgeous blue NSU Ro 80. The driver was really brave throwing it around the curves. The body roll was nostalgic.

  • @ajdahun
    @ajdahun Год назад +21

    as a kid, riding in the back seat of a "Knall Orange" Taunus 2.0 Kombi, back in '76, I saw a few of these running flat out on the Autobahn. They were quite fast, probably due to the aerodynamics.

  • @reddermot
    @reddermot Год назад +2

    I've waited a long time to see some rotary content on your channel. The Ro80 was misunderstood in period by both customers and service departments. It quickly gained quite an unfair reputation for unreliability. A lot of engines replaced under warranty were not even terminal in the first place! Basic servicing and maintenance could have prevented a lot of issues.
    It is a car that has aged well in terms of design and it is great to see the Ro80 getting some time in the spotlight. Thanks for posting.

  • @TheStobb50
    @TheStobb50 Год назад +4

    I Remember when I first started driving in 1976 scrapyard absolutely full of these, Ro80s and they weren’t very old, and they all looked in good condition, but every one of them had a fried engine. Beautiful cars well ahead of their time if you look at the way Audi went in the 70s and 80s a lot of the design features got transferred over thank you, interesting video

  • @johanwejedaldesign
    @johanwejedaldesign Год назад +1

    Yay! The Ro80!! I just love futuristic odd ball cars!

  • @johnreitz5676
    @johnreitz5676 Год назад +18

    Very late VW beetles in the US had what VW called the "Automatc Stick Shift" which worked the same way. Both were made by Sachs as I recall.
    I worked in the VW parts business for most of 20 years and the only repair parts these needed were the micro switch at the bottom of the gear lever and the vacuum servo or repair kit for it.

    • @bmepdoc9675
      @bmepdoc9675 Год назад +4

      Porsche as well. They offered a sport-o-matic which coincided with VW's release of the 'Automatic Stick Shift'. I believe they were offered, starting in 1968.

    • @Solar55
      @Solar55 Год назад +2

      @@bmepdoc9675 Yeah my Dad had a 911 with the semi auto. I had to get out of the habit of holding on to the shifter (after shifting) or the clutch wouldn't engage !

    • @martymiller4300
      @martymiller4300 Год назад +6

      The 911 with the sport-matic was so rare and unique. My father was looking for a Porsche (eventually bought a new ‘69 912) and found a 911T on a used car lot. Neither my father nor the salesman knew how the sport-matic worked so the test drive was a series of clutch dumps from redline when the rev limiter (built into the distributor rotor) would kick in. Whichever of the two uneducated drivers was at the wheel would inadvertently touch the shifter disengaging the clutch and sending the howling rev happy flat 6 to max rpm, release the shifter and send full throttle to the road no matter the attitude of the steering. Luckily they got the thing back to the carlot without smashing into anything and both walked away shaking and soaked with sweat from fright. The rev limiting centrifugal ground distributor rotor happened to be completely interchangeable with a beetle rotor so if someone had cheaped out and installed the solid rotor there would have been valves and pistons colliding along with the kinetic mayhem of the drivetrain. The stuff of nightmares.

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад

      @@bmepdoc9675 Correct.

  • @tomklein_photo
    @tomklein_photo 4 месяца назад

    Thanks for the great video! We have a 1970 Ro80 in padma green for nearly 20 years (with only one previous owner). Once we even took her to England to the Goodwood Revival... the guard initially didn't want to let us in the classic car park as he thought the car is too modern ;-) Eventually we parked next to a Rolls Royce, whose owner was so delighted to see a Ro80 that he gave us free passes for the paddocks. In general I was surprised how many people in the UK knew and like the Ro80.

  • @alansorbie4038
    @alansorbie4038 Год назад +28

    As a 17 year old buying my first car back in 1993 you could still find these around for £1000 or so, usually with a SAAB/ Ford v4 fitted. Triumph 2000s were my second choice. Then insurance costs suddenly went crazy and I could only afford a 1.0 metro…. I eventually got a Triumph 2000 which was a brilliant old car but have never even driven an Ro80 😢

    • @Carrera-gp9od
      @Carrera-gp9od Год назад +5

      My dad had a bright yellow Triumph 2500s back in the 80s , great car but not very well rust proofed !

    • @alansorbie4038
      @alansorbie4038 Год назад +3

      @@Carrera-gp9od I bought my 1969 2000 in 2006, it was one of the first mk2 models. It had plenty of old rust repairs but never missed a beat and took me all over the UK in the 7 years I owned it

    • @ForeverNeverwhere1
      @ForeverNeverwhere1 Год назад +1

      I went for a test drive in an RO80 circa 88 or 89, never drove it sadly as the owner was an old fuddy duddy. 700 quid, a green one, it was my dad stopped me buying it as he worked with a German expat who used to rebuild the engines, used to being the operative word as parts then were impossible to find.
      I have kinda fancied finding one ever since, I think I have one ever seen 2 since.

    • @simonjohnson1
      @simonjohnson1 Год назад

      Triumph 2000 estate with overdrive was a great car

  • @rustybearden1800
    @rustybearden1800 Год назад +1

    My first exposure to Audis was by way of my high school friend Michael - his Dad (and my friends family) had been stationed in Germany via the United States Army in the mid 60s and Bud (my friend's father) took a liking to German automobiles, particularly the early Audis. Fast forward to 1975 and Bud had an immaculate 1975 Audi 100 sedan, fully optioned, all leather with a Blaupunkt stereo and sunroof in a light silvery metallic gold paint. What a car! My limited experience with foreign cars was mostly Japanese family econoboxs, the random Fiat, Jaguars and Mercs. I was enthralled by this gorgeous beast of an Audi , quiet, somewhat powerful, elegant and altogether different than any thing else at that time. Bud used to toss us the keys and advise us to bring it back washed, vacuumed and full of gas! The interior was so comfortable and cushy yet restrained and "very German." Bud would occasionally mention the NSUs he saw back in Germany but more like we talk about the old Chrysler letter series sedans, the Studebaker sedans and the early 60s Lincolns. He traded his Audis every two or three years to upgrade, moving through the evolution of the sedan to the 5000, eventually settling into a (now rare) Audi Avant. But I do remember him mentioning the NSU because of the Wankel engine. This one is so beautiful and so reminds me of the early US spec Audi sedans. But it does have a whiff of a Citroen.

  • @multislipful
    @multislipful Год назад +6

    Thank you for taking this car out for a ride. I have had a very soft spot for them ever since their launch. It was a beautiful shape and pushed the mechanical boundaries so far - if a little bit sad that it was released before the power plant was fully developed. The German car industry was seriously flirting with the Wankel engine in the 1960s - who can forget the Wankel powered Mercedes C111, which was an amazingly striking design of that period? Thanks again for showing this to everyone.

  • @brianball2002
    @brianball2002 Год назад +1

    My Dad had one of these. Very plush inside, ultra quiet ride and all the neighbours were jealous. What amazing memories this brought back. I would definitely say this car was not 100% healthy!

  • @weldhard996
    @weldhard996 Год назад +5

    Back in 1977 my friend at technical college had three . One the same colour blue as that , but he converted the engine to a granada 2.8 but kept the three speed semi auto box .

    • @tomcarr1358
      @tomcarr1358 Год назад

      I converted mine to a Mazda equivalent. Lightweight body panels lead to early rust. Expensive on fuel and platinum terminald spark plug .

  • @thomaschetwood6249
    @thomaschetwood6249 Год назад +1

    Thank you, Harry, that was fascinating. Please can you now take out a semi-auto Citroen DS for a test!
    The design of the Ro80 is truly timeless. I think it is interesting that both it and the DS had very long wheelbases - something that EV architecture encourages today. Perhaps that is one reason why the proportions of those two appear so modern.
    I owned a 1973 DS20 with the 4 speed semi-auto gearbox for several years and found the gears quite logical and easy. It strikes me that having the switch/gearstick on the steering column, as in the DS, with the gears clearly labelled might be an easier way to control the box than the Ro80's '3-on-the-floor'.
    The DS had a floor mounted parking brake too - like Mercedes and Mk 1 Volvo Xc90s - which worked well with the semi-auto and I would imagine slightly better than with the manual box.
    The engines of both the DS and the Ro80 were their Achilles Heels and both might be big beneficiaries of an EV conversion, especially the DS where the engine was one of the few parts of the design that showed absolutely no innovation. You are based quite close to Electrogenic (in Kidlington): could you ask them if you could drive the DS they converted to EV???
    www.electrogenic.co.uk/cars/electric-citroen-ds

  • @suavesmithy
    @suavesmithy Год назад +4

    My dad had one of these when I was a kid , brought the memories back 😊

  • @tsr207
    @tsr207 Год назад

    Used to walk past one of these every day on my way to school - looked marvellous and the few occasions I saw it moving it was appeared very quiet and smooth to pull away !

  • @burnbabybyrne1
    @burnbabybyrne1 Год назад +3

    This takes me back to my youth. My dad had 2 Ro80s. One to drive, one for spare parts! I remember helping him change the engine once. Perfect car for someone like him: an engineer and aircraft mechanic; not so good for somone who just wanted a car with a reliable engine. The Ro80 was in its element at speed on the motorway on long journeys. It would hit its cruising speed and become a quieter, smoother ride. I’d forgotten about the seat belt arrangement without a buckle, but definitely remember the semi-automatic. Apart from losing engine compression, they were such great cars. Worth noting that the protectionist import policies of the UK at the time probably also helped see the demise of this brand.

  • @brianperry
    @brianperry Год назад +1

    I owned one of these beautiful cars in the mid seventies. It’s design and smooth shape sliced through the air. It’s engine was incredible smooth running. Even now it’s design doesn’t look out of place over fifty years later…It’s Achilles heel was the Engine though….the early cars were underdeveloped, the rotor seals being a major problem…..mine being one of them…l still remember it fondly though

  • @buickboy92
    @buickboy92 Год назад +3

    What a wonderfully quirky car, I haven't seen a video of these in ages. It's nice to be reminded how charming the little Ro80s are.

  • @carswithcharacter
    @carswithcharacter Год назад +1

    In the mid 80s I drove a '74 Porsche 911 (2.7L, mechanical fuel injection) that had a semi automatic gearbox. Brilliant! At the time I was also jumping in and out of many Citroens fitted with the C-matic, semi automatic.

  • @pj9375
    @pj9375 Год назад +6

    A more successful application of the Wankel was the Mazda Rx7. Would love you to review this Harry and more JDM stuff in general 😊

  • @oliverstricker2848
    @oliverstricker2848 Год назад +1

    Love it, my father drove one. I‘ll never forget that Sound ❤

  • @simonk6140
    @simonk6140 Год назад +7

    My uncle had a bright red Ro80, way back when. His technique for shifting gear was to cradle the knob with the stick between middle and ring finger and his thumb on the button top to operate the clutch. Very helpful, when you're waiting at the lights or a junction, as you only had to lift your thumb to engage the drive. I definitely remember it being super quiet compared to the standard family cars of the day.

  • @alejandrohualdez5550
    @alejandrohualdez5550 Год назад +1

    I remember my dad owning that same yellow VW K70 in about 1973. It was a great car.

  • @compu85
    @compu85 Год назад +5

    I've always wanted to drive a semi automatic gearbox like this. Seems like it could be a really nice solution, having a torque converter for creeping along, then clutching fully in once under way, and not needing to stand on the clutch pedal while in traffic.

  • @NickMossEarly911
    @NickMossEarly911 Год назад +1

    Great video Harry, thanks. My dad bought one new in 1976 (I was 21) and I drove it extensively. I remember it has adequate performance and the smoothest and quietest engine I had experienced, so I'm so disappointed that your example was so rough and slow, especially coming the the Audi fleet.

  • @darrennolan3332
    @darrennolan3332 Год назад +11

    Hi Harry. I think it would be great if we saw a few more classic cars on the channel. Maybe the sort of car that would be in the same class as the Rolls Royce. The car you might have seen on a suburban driveway back in the 60's, 70's or even 80's. The sort of car that caught your eye as you passed it on the way to school or the bus to work every day but knew it would always be out of reach.

  • @HarborLockRoad
    @HarborLockRoad Год назад +1

    I had 2 older first generation prinzes, 59 and 60 models, with the 20 hp air cooled rear engine of 583cc... Nsu is very dear to my heart as the 59 was my first car. You didnt see many of them in new england

  • @marian6593
    @marian6593 Год назад +3

    Yes, I remember the NSU so well from my teenage and early 20s years. I thought they looked amazing but they suddenly seemed to disappear and nobody talked about them. I'd almost begun to believe it was a figment of my imagination. This was a wonderful and fascinating review. Much appreciated, thanks 👍☺

  • @UberLummox
    @UberLummox Год назад

    Thanks for this! Found an Ro80 here in New England a while back. The houses are so beautiful there!!!

  • @westmus
    @westmus Год назад +3

    The Ro80 do also have the most unsual steering setup I remember seeing. It have a big swing arm mounted at the top of the cowl in the center, a half rack and pinion mounted on one side of it and a seperate hydraulic cylinder on the other side. The low end of the swing arm do then connect to the wheels by a center link.

  • @peterduxbury927
    @peterduxbury927 Год назад

    Back in 1974, I worked in Scotland, and a Worker there, bought an RO80. He drove it to the Work Site, all beaming and happy! The RO80 owner decided to allow another workmate to drive the RO 80 around the private road. Other workers piled - in, not bothering to fasten the Seat Belts. I watched from a distance, as the RO80 set-off in 1st gear. The driver (inexperienced) tried to change to 2nd gear - but made the mistake of pressing the Brake Pedal very hard!! All those inside the RO80 - ended up in a crumpled heap! I just had to laugh at seeing this, my first experience of the NSU RO 80! Today, it would be a great candidate for conversion to EV, being a 'slippery' body design that is even better today, when compared with many modern 'plastic' cars that hold no future value at all. Greetings from Australia.

  • @keithhigh7773
    @keithhigh7773 Год назад +3

    I think it is still a great looking car. Would not look out of place today and, l believe, the wear problems with the rotary engine have been solved. Great sound. Very courageous of VAG to loan this icon to Harry, somebody may be in for a bollocking if the "high ups" see the video!!

  • @hirokusaikaru6624
    @hirokusaikaru6624 Год назад

    Well done Harry! My father had one when I was a child and it was my favorite car ever.

  • @murrayfranklyn84
    @murrayfranklyn84 Год назад +4

    Great to see the Ro80 on your site, I have had 3 in the past and still own one now, although it doesn't get driven. With the rotary engine you had to drive them, plenty of revs. The first one I owned had engine problems the chambers had scored, so I decided to fit a Ford corsair GT V4 engine, made up an adapter plate so was able to keep the same transmission. The second Ro80 I bought was from a scrapyard it was only 2 years old but the previous owner, ( a well-known DJ in the UK with initials JP) decided to scrap it rather than repair it. Originally I replaced the engine with a V4, but my ex-wife used to like racing Jags away from the traffic lights in it, and eventually the diff gave out. I managed to keep the car after the divorce, and replaced the engine and transmission from an Audi 100, the Audi also ran front wheel drive with inboard disc brakes, it was quite a difficult alteration, as the Audi engine is a lot longer than a twin-rotor, I had to push the radiator forward, use electric fans for cooling, ended up with 10mm between the engine and radiator.

    • @levelcrossing150
      @levelcrossing150 Год назад +1

      A friend of mine fitted the Corsair V4 in his too and ran it for years.

  • @loveisall5520
    @loveisall5520 Год назад

    I was in junior high here in Texas when this showed up in the car magazines. We just loved it. Never saw one on the roads here, of course.

  • @robtt997
    @robtt997 Год назад +11

    I passed my test in the late 196Os. I went to the local NSU dealer to look at this car and was amazed at how futuristic it was compared to any other contemporary car . Afterwards , I jumped in my Hillman Imp and decided to try my hand at the football pools ,to win enough money to cover the purchase price . Didn’t work !

  • @stevenwilkie2134
    @stevenwilkie2134 Год назад +1

    These videos interest me so much more than the latest super car etc. It must have seemed like a spaceship compared to the British stuff in the 70s 😎

  • @usuallyfixingtinkering
    @usuallyfixingtinkering Год назад +7

    Always loved the look of these, the curvy lines which took 20 years for manufacturers to copy in their own definition!

  • @stephenbrent
    @stephenbrent Год назад +1

    Loved this video. I had a Dinky model of a Ro80 as a 10 year old and was fascinated by its shape compared to other cars

  • @chriswilkinson1991
    @chriswilkinson1991 Год назад +11

    This is the one I’ve been waiting for, absolutely fantastic! What an interesting car, more reviews of quirky cars like this please

  • @ktrethewey
    @ktrethewey Год назад

    Very happy to see older cars, Harry. We don’t always need the super cars.

  • @Charstring
    @Charstring Год назад +5

    Saw a beautiful Ro 80 in a scrapyard near Hailsham in the late '80s, it looked in great condition (I just assumed that it was being scrapped because of the rotor tips) and the design still looked modern and stylish.

    • @johnbewick6357
      @johnbewick6357 Год назад +1

      Daves autos, by any chance.

    • @Charstring
      @Charstring Год назад

      I think you're right. I had forgotten because I haven't been there for yonks, but it sounds right.

  • @AdamLeask
    @AdamLeask Год назад

    The standing joke was that if you were driving an Ro80 and saw another, you’d not wave, but instead hold up the number of fingers that corresponded to how many engine you’d gone through. Love it!

  • @simonbishop6041
    @simonbishop6041 Год назад +2

    Harry's enthusiasm is fantastic- His videos are very addictive regardless of the actual car- great job!

  • @williamegler8771
    @williamegler8771 Год назад

    That is one of the most beautiful sedans ever produced!

  • @geraldmellon740
    @geraldmellon740 Год назад +3

    Another great review Harry. I'm almost 60 and I (possibly) remember these from the annual motor show in Glasgow we used to visit. Looked like a bit of a rollercoaster ride during your drive. Well done. Brilliant.

  • @marksphotoperry356
    @marksphotoperry356 20 дней назад

    Do remember RO 80 was taken for a short ride in it as was a youth .The hi Revving motor did impress me a lot !

  • @Martin_in_Cheltenham
    @Martin_in_Cheltenham Год назад +3

    A great video of a stunning car. I did spot this in the background of another recent video and hoped you would review this. Thanks for taking the time to do this.

  • @stevemccormack9948
    @stevemccormack9948 Год назад

    After all these years I still love it so much

  • @The-Real-Blissful-Ignorance
    @The-Real-Blissful-Ignorance Год назад +7

    I enjoy these glimpses into automotive history. Thanks, Harry.

  • @geoffreyhui830
    @geoffreyhui830 Год назад

    I had a hand-me-down from my uncle in Hong Kong. It didn't come with air-conditioning. It had an after-market air conditioner fitted, which was very bad for the engine. So it was removed before I became the owner.
    The rearview mirror also housed the courtesy light. It had a safety feature - it wasn't rigidly fixed. If you hit your head or hand against it, it dropped off. Easy enough to fit in again.
    The turning circle was very small. It's not what you expect with a front wheel drive.
    The back seat back cushions were removable, very hand to put large items in the boot.
    The armrest had a slide panel behind it so that you could put skis partly in the boot and extending forward.
    If I felt in a sporty mood, I would go up to 35 mph in first and 70 mph in second. The manual called them "ranges" and not "gears"
    You wouldn't pull away from the car beside you until they had to change to 2nd gear and your were still in 1st.

  • @DSTARDITI
    @DSTARDITI Год назад +6

    Really interesting design for the time, soft suspension is something I missed these days, cars have giant alloys, tiny tyres and everything suspension wise is rock hard for the trashed UK roads!

    • @michaelbenardo5695
      @michaelbenardo5695 Год назад +1

      That's one of the reasons I hate today's tin cans = I hate stiff suspension, unless it is a sports/high performance car. Otherwise, I want cushy comfort. Damn the handling, as I know how to handle a car.

    • @DSTARDITI
      @DSTARDITI Год назад +1

      @@michaelbenardo5695 That's it man, comfort :)