Cool, didn't realize there were so many.
E class Mercedes is sold in US showrooms today with coupe, sedan, wagon, and convertible versions. As mentioned above, tons of car companies have done this in the past, but in a modern sense there aren't many who have all four for one body style (particularly all sold in the US).
Bryce
Pretty much every American full sized and medium sized car from the 1930s through the early 1970s offered a wagon and ragtop version
In reply to jstein77:
I thought he did a great job finding those pictures. Especially the ragtop with the spinners and graphics that make right at home in the front row of a Wal-Mart parking lot.
Wally wrote: In reply to jstein77: I thought he did a great job finding those pictures. Especially the ragtop with the spinners and graphics that make right at home in the front row of a Wal-Mart parking lot.
You forgot to mention parking in the handicap spot. At least there is a proper placard hanging from the interior mirror - I hope.
Sold today in the US, I think that we're looking at Mercedes E class, BMW 3 series, Audi A5/A6, and Audi A4.
Close but not quite is the Lexus IS. In the past it was a wagon, currently it is a convertible. CTS has sedan wagon and coupe which is rare as well.
cutter67 wrote: you could always go this route the best of both worlds
A guy in my town has one of those. I always see him hauling crap to the dump in it.
xflowgolf wrote:cghstang wrote: K cars
Are you kidding me? They actually tried to pass those off as luxury cars?
Some people's kids.
And Corvair was mentioned in the fourth responce.
Ashyukun wrote: Bizarre question that I just don't know enough about cars to answer myself but the collective knowledge here likely does: have there been any cars that have come in both a convertible and a wagon version? Coupe/Sedan/Wagon (ex: Saturn S-series) aren't that uncommon, but have there been any platforms that have had both a convertible and a wagon?
Basically anything from the 60s was available in convertible form, and most were also available as wagons.
The last car I'm aware of that you haven't mentioned was the European design Cavalier. I know they had convertibles available in the 80s but I don't know when they stopped, but they were also available as wagons. And 2-doors. And 4-doors. And hatchbacks.
Tom_Spangler wrote: E30, though they never sold the wagon here.
Are you certain that e30 wagons were never sold in the US market? I'm asking because I've seen one cruising around in West Philly, not exactly a place to show off uour rare grey market whip..... OTOH, it wouldn't be the first really odd thing that I've seen in Philly
HappyAndy wrote:Tom_Spangler wrote: E30, though they never sold the wagon here.Are you certain that e30 wagons were never sold in the US market? I'm asking because I've seen one cruising around in West Philly, not exactly a place to show off uour rare grey market whip..... OTOH, it wouldn't be the first really odd thing that I've seen in Philly
Yes, it is a 100% known fact that E30 tourings were not sold here, just like the E36 touring. There seems to be a small number running around Canada but I'm not sure they were officially sold there either.
This is why the ones that ARE in the US command outrageous $15k+ asking prices. I love me some E30, but not that much.
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