Being just older than dirt, I was around when "Hardtops" were introduced. D^2 is correct. This was a new concept, at last for the major car makers. Previously only convertibles had an unobstructed window opening from front to rear. If I remember correctly, Willys Aero had the first one in 1952. Willys was the company famous for making Jeeps. They made a very nice small sedan in the 1950's with an "F"- head six engine. (Anyone out there, under 65, know what an F-head is?) The same company was sold/merged, etc. and later purchased by Chrysler. Reminiscing, 4 - Toes On Tue, 05 Mar 2002 10:00:56 -0600 "D. Dardalis" <dardal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > At 12:13 AM 3/5/2002 -0600, you wrote: > >PS Why is it called a hardtop anyway? I know what a soft top is. > > Hugh, > I am not sure if this is right, but the original term was "hardtop > convertible". Without a B-pillar it is as if the car is a > convertible, but > it actually has a hardtop rather than a soft top (so, its really not > a > convertible, but it kind'o looks like one). Eventually, the term > got > simplified and the second word got damped and forgotten. I had read > this > on the British "Classic Cars" Magazine when they made a presentation > of an > early 50's Bu*ck Roadmaster 2 door hardtop, I think 53. > D^2 > > >