Author | Message |
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◊ 2008-02-09 11:12 |
I think, this is called "landaulet" and might be listed as a limousine. okay? :-)) m. |
◊ 2008-02-09 11:31 |
The car looks almost surely to be a medium sized Renault, middle 1920s, while the radiator was still behind the engine, and is a taxi or a town car, sometimes called a "Coupe de Ville", the "e" in coupe should have an acute accent over it. A limousine is a completely closed car with a moveable but permanently installed glass division between the passengers and the hired help, many of which had a speaking tube to communicate instructions. |
◊ 2008-02-09 18:29 |
All these names vary from one country to another, and also depends on the years. In French "limousine" means 6-window. |
◊ 2008-02-09 20:09 |
It is certainly one of their smaller models - maybe an NN1?. Somewhere there is good French website with all of the Renault models on it which I have lost the link to. |
◊ 2008-02-09 21:27 |
http://www.renaultoloog.nl/renaultoloog-english.htm Was it this one (which is Dutch)? ... NN, NN2 maybe ... |
◊ 2010-12-02 20:16 |
I agree it's indeed a 6CV Landaulet [Type NN] 1927 , or [Type NN2] 1928/29, and not a 10CV Taxi, which should be little bit longer. Space between front and rear doors can confirm that. But this kind of body "Landaulet" wasn't available in factory range of the 6CV in 1927/28, so it might be specific body on a nude chassis. |
◊ 2013-06-25 17:18 |
Renault Landaulet 6CV type NN taxi avec taximètre à gauche. |