Tonneau
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Tonneau
1903
Ford Model A rear-door TonneauTonneau (pronounced ta’-no) is an
archaic term for an open rear passenger compartment on an
automobile
and, by extension, a
body style incorporating such a compartment. Most tonneaus were fixed in
place as an optional element at purchase, but some could be removed as on the
Crestmobile. Early tonneaus had a rear-facing hinged door as a rule, but single-
or dual side doors were soon introduced. The first side-door tonneau was made by
Peerless, but others quickly followed suit. This led to the development of
the modern
sedan/saloon, with
Cadillac manufacturing the first production closed-body four-door car in 1910.
In the post-WW2
era the term has come to refer to the area behind the front seats of an open car
(a
convertible or
roadster).
The term tonneau cover is sometimes used for a hard or soft cover that
encloses the well for the convertible top and/or the rear seating/storage area.
It is also used to describe a similar cover for a
pickup truck
bed.
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