IMCDb Forum
Send an answer to a topic: Mass change model info thread
Subject
Bold [b]Text[/b] Italic [i]Italic[/i] Underline [u]Underline[/u] Strike Out [strike]Strike Out[/strike]
Email [email=nobody@nobody.org]Name[/email] Link [url=http://www.website.com]Text[/url] Anchor [anchor]Name[/anchor] Image [img]http://www.website.com/image.jpg[/img]
Align Left [align=left]Text[/align] Centered [align=center]Text[/align] Align Right [align=right]Text[/align] Text Justify [align=justify]Text[/text]
Color [color=#000000]Text[/color] Highlight [highlight=pascal]Text[/highlight] Widgets Smileys :code: [:code] HTML to BBCode converter Word to BBCode converter
Preview Spell Checker

Copy Paste Cut Select All
Clear Insert Date Insert Time Insert Date and Time Insert your IP
List [list=square][item]BlaBla[/item][/list] Numbered List [list=decimal][item]BlaBla[/item][/list]
Quote [quote=name]Text[/quote] Spoiler [spoiler]James is the murderer![/spoiler]
Uppercase [uppercase]Text[/uppercase] Lowercase [lowercase]Text[/lowercase] l33t [l33t]I'm a Nerd[/l33t] Sub Script [sub]Text[/sub] Super Script [sup]Text[/sup] Size of Text [size=8]Text[/size]

Options
 
 
 
 
antp
Sorry :smile:
That's the problem of separate requests: each time I rewrite my query, that increases the risk of a typo :grin:
MisterZ

In the 1950's the Ford Crown Victoria had a pillar, the regular Victoria was a hardtop.


There was a regular Victoria??
night cub

I just went through the site to see the example of 2 door sedan, but I still quite not sure the definition of this term
Some said 2 doors with solid B-pillar make it a 2-door sedan? So these examples are also sedan?

No. That description is an overly simplistic definition that never made any sense. There were coupes in the pre-War era, and all of them had fixed, solid B-pillars. It wasn't until the introduction of the pillarless hardtop that there was any distinction, so that was around 1950 and lasted to about the mid-1980s. And even then then definition didn't work. In the 1950's the Ford Crown Victoria had a pillar, the regular Victoria was a hardtop. In the 1960's the General Motors midsize A-bodies offered a fixed pillar coupe and a hardtop coupe and in the Chevelle a 2-door sedan. In the 1970s, the GM A-bodies carried the Colonnade styling with coupes with posts. So as a definition, it doesn't work.

In the modern era (from around 1980 on), most car lines stopped offering multiple two-door body styles, and they basically labeled their two-door models as "coupes" and the 4-doors as "sedans" (some sporty cars did continue to offer notchbacks and liftbacks at the same time). So people have come to associate any two-door with the term "coupe". To add to the confusion, manufacturers started making fastback 4-doors and called them "coupes". And now there are SUV Coupes which are neither sedan nor coupe.

I generally go by what the manufacturer calls a two-door body. In the Impreza's case, they called it a "Impreza Coupe" in the US.

http://importarchive.com/brochure/subaruimpreza1995_02
antp

For these are Racecar


That category was for cars with special body like F1, Nascar, etc.
These have have the same body style as the production models, so they could be listed in the same way.
So I'd rather change those already listed as racecar.
antp


That's rather a 2-door sedan
Category:  






Ada
CSS
Cobol
CPP
HTML
Fortran
Java
JavaScript
Pascal
Perl
PHP
Python
SQL
VB
XML
Anon URL
DailyMotion
eBay
Flickr
FLV
Google Video
Metacafe
MP3
SeeqPod
Veoh
Yahoo Video
YouTube
6px
8px
10px
12px
14px
16px
18px
Sign In :: Sign Up :: Lost your login or your password?
KelCommunity.be :: © 2004-2023 Akretio SPRL :: Powered by Kelare