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Ponton (automobile)

 
Ponton (automobile)

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Ponton (automobile)



 
 
Ponton, which in French
French language

French is a Romance language spoken around the world by around 80 million people as first language, by 190 million as second language, and by about another 200 million people as an acquired tongue, with significant speakers in 54 countries....
 and German
German language

German is a West Germanic languages, thus related to and classified alongside English language and Dutch language. It is one of the world's world language and the most widely spoken mother tongue in the European Union....
 means "pontoon", can also refer to a certain slab-sided style of car bodywork.

Cars in this rounded, slab-sided style were produced by numerous manufacturers in Europe and the U.S.

In the 1960s, according to Jeff Miller, Germans used the term for "all vehicles of standard size, with front engines and rear trunks".






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Mercedes 180 2 V Sst
Ponton, which in French
French language

French is a Romance language spoken around the world by around 80 million people as first language, by 190 million as second language, and by about another 200 million people as an acquired tongue, with significant speakers in 54 countries....
 and German
German language

German is a West Germanic languages, thus related to and classified alongside English language and Dutch language. It is one of the world's world language and the most widely spoken mother tongue in the European Union....
 means "pontoon", can also refer to a certain slab-sided style of car bodywork.

Cars in this rounded, slab-sided style were produced by numerous manufacturers in Europe and the U.S.

In the 1960s, according to Jeff Miller, Germans used the term for "all vehicles of standard size, with front engines and rear trunks". He said it was unclear why "this former general expression" came to be used "exclusively by Mercedes-Benz enthusiasts" to designate the 1953-1962 models
Mercedes-Benz Ponton

The Ponton was Daimler-Benz's first totally-new Mercedes-Benz series of passenger vehicles produced after World War II. In July 1953, the cars replaced the pre-war-designed Mercedes-Benz W136 series and were the bulk of the automaker's production through 1959, though some models lasted through 1962....
 (see below).

Origin of the body style

One of the first known cars with a ponton-body is the Bugatti type 32 "Tank" which participated in the 1923 French Grand Prix at Tours.

The first production car of the world with a ponton-body was the Hanomag
Hanomag

Hanomag was a Germany producer of steam locomotives, tractors, trucks and military vehicles. Hanomag first achieved international fame by delivering a large number of steam locomotives to Romania and Bulgaria before WW I....
 2/10. The car's body resembled a loaf of bread
Bread

Bread is a staple food prepared by baking a dough of flour and water. It may be leavened or unleavened. Edible salt, fat and a leavening agent such as yeast are common ingredients, though bread may contain a range of other ingredients: milk, Egg , sugar, spice, fruit , vegetables , Nut or seeds ....
 earning it the sobriquet
Sobriquet

A sobriquet is a nickname or a fancy name, usually a familiar name given by others as distinct from a pseudonym assumed as a disguise, but a nickname which is familiar enough such that it can be used in place of a real name without the need of explanation....
 of "Kommissbrot" - a coarse whole grain
Whole grain

Whole grains are cereal that contain bran and cereal germ as well as the endosperm, in contrast to refined grains, which retain only the endosperm....
 bread as issued by the army. The economical car was produced from 1924 to 1928. The car's designer, Fidelis Böhler, built the core body around two side-by-side passenger seats. He dispensed with running board
Running board

A running board is a car or truck accessory part, a narrow step fitted under the side doors of the vehicle. It aids entry, especially into high vehicles....
s and integrated the fenders in the body to save on weight. The cheap car became a best seller in Germany.

Pinin Farina designed a flowing ponton-style body for the Lancia Aprilia berlinetta aerodynamica coupé that made its debut in 1937, and also the open body on the 1940 Lancia Aprilia Cabriolet.

At the end of the 1930s the BMW 328
BMW 328

The BMW 328 is a sports car made by BMW between 1936 and 1940, designed by Kurt Joachimson.It featured many advanced features for its time, such as a tubular space frame and a hemispherical combustion chamber engine....
 had some very modern ponton-body's (in closed and open form) which where some years ahead of its time.

The 1946 Cisitalia
Cisitalia

Cisitalia was an Italy sports and racing car constructor. The name "Cisitalia" derives from "Consorzio Industriale Sportive Italia," a business conglomerate founded in Turin in 1946 and controlled by the wealthy industrialist and sportsman Piero Dusio....
 202 coupé, which Farina designed from sketches by Cisitalia’s Giovanni Savonuzzi, was the car that "transformed postwar automobile design" according to New York’s Museum of Modern Art
Museum of Modern Art

The Museum of Modern Art is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, USA, on 53rd Street, between Fifth and Sixth Avenues....
 (MoMA). MoMA acquired an example for its permanent collection in 1951, noting that the car’s "hood, body, fenders, and headlights are integral to the continuously flowing surface, rather than added on. Before the Cisitalia, the prevailing approach followed by automobile designers when defining a volume and shaping the shell of an automobile was to treat each part of the body as a separate, distinct element." Also introduced in 1947, the Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 was another ponton-style Farina design which, together with those by Touring
Touring

Touring may mean:* touring, the estate/wagon version of BMW cars* Bicycle touring* Ski touring* Touring * Carrozzeria Touring* Touring ...
 and others on the same chassis, has also been credited with setting the trend for post-war automotive design.

Rounded, flowing forms, with unbroken horizontal lines between the fenders—the style that Paolo Tumminelli calls "Ponton Side Design"—became "the new fashion in Europe", where Alfa-Romeo, Fiat and Rover were among the first to offer it.

An inspiration to American and Japanese manufacturers as well as to Europeans, Farina’s "ponton line" would be copied round the world. One of the first American cars to adopt it was the 1947 Studebaker Champion
Studebaker Champion

The Champion was an automobile of the Studebaker Corporation of South Bend, Indiana. Production for the model began at the beginning of the 1939 model year and continued until 1958, when the model was phased out in preparation for the 1959 Studebaker Lark....
, designed by Virgil Exner
Virgil Exner

Virgil Max "Ex" Exner, Sr. was an automobile designer for numerous United States companies, notably Chrysler Corporation and Studebaker. He is known for his "Forward Look" design on the 1955 through 1961 Chrysler products and his fondness of fins on cars for both aesthetic and aerodynamic reasons....
 and Roy Cole but sometimes erroneously attributed to Raymond Loewy
Raymond Loewy

Raymond Fernand Loewy was one of the best known industrial designers of the 20th century. Born in France, he spent most of his professional career in the United States where he influenced countless aspects of North American culture....
. Another, the Howard "Dutch" Darrin-designed 1947-1950 Kaiser-Frazer
Kaiser-Frazer

The Kaiser-Frazer Corporation was the result of a partnership between autombile executive Joseph W. Frazer and Industrialist Henry J. Kaiser of Kaiser Company/Kaiser Industries....
, was said to have been the inspiration for the 1949 Borgward Hansa 1500
Borgward Hansa 1500

The Hansa 1500 is a medium sized saloon that was manufactured by the Bremen based auto-manufacturer Borgward. The strikingly modern car first rolled off the production line on October 13 1949 ...
, Germany's first sedan in the ponton style.

In the Soviet Union the GAZ-M20 Pobeda
GAZ-M20 Pobeda

The GAZ-M20 "Pobeda" is a passenger car produced in the Soviet Union by GAZ from 1946 until 1958. It was also licensed to Poland Fabryka Samochod?w Osobowych....
 was introduced in 1946, and in Britain the Standard Vanguard
Standard Vanguard

The Standard Vanguard is a car produced by the Standard Motor Company in Coventry from 1947 to 1963.The car was announced in July 1947 and was completely new with no resemblance to the previous models and was Standard's first post World War II car....
 went on sale the following year.

Ford
Ford Motor Company

The Ford Motor Company is an United States multinational corporation and the world's List of automobile manufacturers#World Motor Vehicle Production by Manufacturer based on worldwide vehicle sales, following Toyota, General Motors, and Volkswagen Group....
 and General Motors
General Motors

General Motors Corporation , founded in 1908, is the world's second-largest automaker after Toyota, ranked by 2008 global unit sales. GM was the global sales leader for 77 consecutive calendar years from 1931 to 2008....
 followed the trend with their own designs in 1949.

Origin of calling the style "ponton"

In Germany, the term Pontonkarrosserie (pontoon body) was used to describe European cars of the post-World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 period. They included Mercedes-Benz
Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz is a German manufacturer of automobiles, buses, coach es, and trucks. It is currently a division of the parent company, Daimler AG , after previously being owned by Daimler-Benz....
, Opel
Opel

Adam Opel Gesellschaft mit beschr?nkter Haftung is a Germany automaker, part of General Motors.The company was founded on 21 January, 1863, and began making automobiles in 1899....
, Auto Union
Auto Union

Auto Union was an amalgamation of four Germany automobile manufacturers, established in 1932 in Chemnitz, Saxony, during the Great Depression. The company has evolved into present day Audi, as an independent subsidiary of Volkswagen Group....
 (inc. DKW
DKW

Dampf Kraft Wagen or DKW is a historic automobile and motorcycle marque. In 1916, the Denmark engineer J?rgen Skafte Rasmussen founded a factory in Saxony, Germany, to produce steam fittings....
) and Borgward
Borgward

Borgward was a Germany automobile manufacturer founded by Carl F. W. Borgward . The company was based in Bremen.The first "automobile" Carl Borgward designed was the Blitzkarren ...
 (inc. Hansa
Borgward Hansa 1500

The Hansa 1500 is a medium sized saloon that was manufactured by the Bremen based auto-manufacturer Borgward. The strikingly modern car first rolled off the production line on October 13 1949 ...
) models.

It may be that when in the early 1950s Mercedes-Benz integrated their cars' headlight into the fenders and blended the fenders into the body the new shape resembled a pontoon to people accustomed to the free-standing headlights and separate fenders of the previous models.

Another theory is that a journalist likened the sub-frame of the 1953 Mercedes-Benz's novel unitary construction—in which a sub-frame holds the engine, transmission, suspension and steering, and the body is a stressed shell—to a pontoon bridge.

Examples of "ponton" in automotive contexts

The term is now commonly used in reference to Mercedes-Benz models from 1953-1962. For example a book about the marque refers to "the Ponton", the "Ponton saloon", "Ponton 220", "Ponton 220S and SE coupes and cabriolets", and "the Ponton models".

A General Motors document refers to the 1953 Olympia Rekord as "the first Opel with a full-width, or ponton, body shell".

In a reference work on alternative-energy vehicles, electrical-engineering academics used the term as a generic for saloon cars with "three-box design" ; also a 2007 German work on car design and technology mentions a "Rover-Ponton" (ponton-style Rover); and a French book on art and design also used the term in an automotive context in 1996.

In Holland it is sometimes used to distinguish the Volkswagen Type 3
Volkswagen Type 3

The Volkswagen Type 3, also referred to as the Volkswagen 1500 and later the Volkswagen 1600, was a range of small cars from Germany manufacturer Volkswagen ....
 (1961-1974) 2-door notchback sedan from the fastback and wagon versions.

The 1948-1950 Packard had a "'Ponton'-style side section with the fenders running through from front to back", according to a blog
Blog

A blog is a type of website, usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video....
ger who also describes the 1951 Packard Patrician as "one of the first cars that featured the new Ponton-style (sic) with integrated front-fenders (sic) at the same level with the hood and a curved onepiece-windscreen (sic).”

Gallery

At present, unlike the Mercedes-Benz Pontons, none of the "ponton"-bodied cars shown below take the "ponton" suffix (as per, for example, "Ford Ponton") among anglophone
Anglophone

An Anglophone is someone who speaks the English language. As an adjective, it refers to belonging to an English-speaking population especially in a country where two or more languages are spoken....
s. Image:Pobeda-GAZ-25-Prototype-1944.jpg|1944 GAZ-25 Pobeda prototype Image:Alfa Romeo 6C 2300 Sport Cabriolet 1947 white r TCE.jpg|Farina-designed 1947 Alfa Romeo 6C 2300 SC Image:Lancia Aurelia GT 2500 B20 blue vr.jpg|1950-1958 Lancia Aurelia B20 Image:195X Ford Consul CRP961.jpg|1950 Ford (GB) Consul Image:1950 Ford 72B Custom De Luxe Club Coupe PDB266.jpg|1950 Ford (USA) Club Coupe Image:Studebaker-champion-convertible-1950.jpg|1950 Studebaker Champion Image:1951 Standard Vanguard.JPG|1951 Standard Vanguard Image:Rover 75 2-Door Saloon 1952.jpg|1952 Rover 75 Image:2007-09-08 2655 Borgward Hansa 1800, Bauzeit 1952-1954 (ret).jpg|1952 Borgward Hansa 1800 Image:212310.jpg|1961-1974 Volkswagen Type 3, sometimes called "ponton" in Holland

See also

  • Mercedes-Benz Ponton
    Mercedes-Benz Ponton

    The Ponton was Daimler-Benz's first totally-new Mercedes-Benz series of passenger vehicles produced after World War II. In July 1953, the cars replaced the pre-war-designed Mercedes-Benz W136 series and were the bulk of the automaker's production through 1959, though some models lasted through 1962....