Woodie
Car Show
Woodie
Pontiac woodie
A woodie is a type of
car,
more specifically an early
station wagon (US) or estate car/shooting brake (UK), in which the rear
portion of the car's bodywork is made of
wood. Frequently
this wood is visible, since it is covered in a clear finish, either over the
entire wooden area or sometimes just on the framework with the interior panels
painted.
The vast majority of woodies were produced before the end of the 1950s at
which time safety regulations and changing automotive fashions meant the
effective end of the style. Woodies were generally not produced by the original
car manufacturer, but were third-party conversions of regular vehicles. Some
were done by large, reputable coachbuilding firms, while others were built by
local carpenters and craftsmen for individual customers.
It is a derivative of the
body-on-frame method of car construction. Earlier cars generally had aluminium
or steel panels bolted on top of the wood framing. Woodies were originally
cheaper because they didn't need these panels and their fitment and painting. So
railway stations used them for hackwork of luggage and petty shipments; hence
the name, station wagon. The tradition of the woodie remains in the woodgrain
decals and plastic beams attached to a structural steel body of many station
wagons. These imitations are considered deceitful for the same reasons that
modern architects maintain Adolf Loos's
statement, "Ornament is Crime."
Biscuter
Comercial 200 C from Spain
This
car
body style was popular both in the
United States and the United Kingdom. Woodies were produced from all kinds of cars, from basic to
luxury, but the most popular conversions were large, powerful but not highly
luxurious models.
In the 1960s and to some degree the 1970s woodies were considered
undesirable, unfashionable old vehicles. California surfers, among others,
realised the potential of these cars; they were cheap, large enough to carry a
good number of people, surfboards and equipment, and could be fixed up with
woodworking skills. Thus, the woodie became the archetypal vehicle of the
surfer; there is probably a higher population of surviving woodies in California
than anywhere else, aided by the area's ideal climate for preserving the
vehicles; warm, dry but not desiccating, with rare rainfall.
These days, woodies are highly
collectible
antique
cars and a good example can fetch a very large amount of money. The wooden
bodywork has often not survived all that well, increasing the rarity.
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