A pickup truck or pick-up is a light motor vehicle with an open-top rear cargo area. They were invented by Ford Australia in 1934.
In North America, the word pickup generally refers to a small or medium sized truck, rather than vehicles based on passenger cars. This light commercial vehicle features a separate cabin and rear load area (separate cargo bed). Two North American vehicles, the Chevrolet El Camino and Ford Ranchero were passenger car-based vehicles with integrated cargo bed, but were not generally referred to as pickup trucks (see Coupe Utility below).
Many pickups have short rigid sides and an opening rear gate, while others have a flat tray back. This type of vehicle is known in Australia and New Zealand as a ute or utility (from "utility vehicle"), in South Africa as a bakkie (pronounced "bucky"), and in Israel as a tender. Panel vans, a kind of van, popular in Australia during the 1970s, were based on a ute chassis.
The design details of such vehicles vary significantly, and different nationalities seem to specialise in different style and size of vehicles. For instance, North American pickups come in full-size (large, heavy vehicles often with V8 or six-cylinder engines), mid-size, and compact (smaller trucks generally equipped with inline 4 engines).
Until recently, compact trucks were very popular in North America, though mid-size trucks are now dominating the market. Compact trucks sold in the US market in 2006 include:
In Europe, compact pickups dominate the pickup market, although they are popular mostly in rural areas. Only Japanese makes such as Toyota (Hi-Lux), Mitsubishi (L200) and Nissan (Navara) have typically built models for this segment, with few entries by European manufacturers, the most notable of which is perhaps the Peugeot 504 Pick-Up, which continued to be sold in Mediterranean Europe and Africa long after the original 504 ceased production. Opel, Ford and VW have occasionally sold rebadged versions of Japanese products, built by Isuzu, Mazda and Toyota, respectively. Eastern European manufacturers such as ARO or UAZ have served their home markets faithfully for decades, but are now disappearing. The near-majority of compact pickups sold in Europe use Diesel engines.
Full-size pickups in North America are sold in three size ranges - 1/2 Ton, 3/4 Ton and 1 Ton. These size ranges originally indicated the maximum payload of the vehicle, however modern pickups can typically carry far more than that. For example, the 2006 model Ford F-150 (a "1/2 Ton" pickup) has a payload of between 1,400 lb and 3,060 lb, depending on configuration. Likewise, the 2006 model F-350 (a "1 Ton" pickup) has a payload of between 4,000 lb and 5,800 lb depending on configuration.
Full-size trucks are often used in North America for general passenger use, usually those with 1/2 ton ratings. For a number of years, the 1/2 ton full-size Ford F150 was the best-selling vehicle in the United States, outselling all other trucks and all passenger car models.
Until recently, only the "Big Three" American automakers (Ford, GM and Chrysler) built full-size pickups. Toyota introduced the T100 full-size pickup truck in 1993, but sales were poor due to high prices and a lack of a V8 engine. However, the introduction of the Tundra and Nissan Titan marked the proper entry of Japanese makers in the market. Both of these trucks are assembled in North America.
As of 2005, five pick-ups are sold as full-size in North America:
The first mid-size pickup was the Dodge Dakota, introduced in 1987 with v6 engine availability to distinguish it from the smaller compact trucks which generally offered only four cylinder engines. Its hallmark was the ability to carry the archetypical 4x8 sheet of plywood (4 feet by 8 feet) flat in the cargo bed, something which compact pickups could only carry at an angle.
In 2006, mid-size and large pickups dominate the US market. Mid-size models include:
In 1934, as the result of a request from a Victorian farmer, Ford Australia combined the cab of its newly released Ford Coupe body with the well-type load area of their roadster utility, producing the first of the "coupe utilities".
Both the coupe utility and the roadster utility continued in production, but the improving economy of the mid to late '30s and the desire for a little comfort saw coupe utility sales climb at the expense of the roadster ute until by 1939, the roadster ute was all but a fading memory. No car maker offered a roadster ute when car production restarted after WWII until 1957 when Ford began offering the Ranchero; GM followed with the El Camino. In the US however, by the mid-'80s the coupe utility began to fall out of favor again with the demise of the Ranchero after 1979, the VW Rabbit (Golf) pickup and of the El Camino after 1986. Subaru still offers a Sedan Utility as the Baja.
Both the coupe utility and closed cab pickup designs migrated to light truck chassis, and these are correctly known respectively as utility trucks and pickup trucks. The pickup design found a natural home on the smaller truck chassis while the ute became entrenched as a passenger car derivitave, so that only one modern manufacturer offers a pickup car based or a utility "truck" today, and even then the body style will be extinct after 2006.
Like the U.S. pickup which was also originally based on a passenger car chassis, the Aussie ute has its origins in the open top passenger car models of the mid 1920s.
The Australian utility started its life as a production model, with its unique one-piece body from the rear of the door opening back to the rearmost of the vehicle, in 1924. The pickup, on the other hand, started its life a little earlier and is defined by its separate, and removeable, well-type "pickup bed". This pickup bed does not contact the cabin part of the vehicle, while the ute bed is an integral part of the whole body.
The ute body-type was first available in Chevrolet then Dodge models, the bodies of which were made by Holden under contract, & they were essentially an extension of the open top roadster design, but with a 'well' type cargo area instead of the roadster turtledeck. These were known as roadster utilities. This basic design quickly gained in popularity & became available as either a standard offering, or special order body from a number of car makers in Australia by 1929.
In North America there is a sub-class pickup size known as mid-sized. It includes the Dodge Dakota and its Mitsubishi Raider derivative. The Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon twin are also in this class. The compact trucks are slowly growing in dimension into this class.
In Latin America, single cab pickups which are based on supermini cars, are fairly popular. They are called "compact," in contrast with "mid-size" (Ranger, S10, Hilux) and "full-size" (Ram, Avalanche, F150), and also nicknamed "picápinhas" in Brazil. Best-sellers are models such as the Chevrolet Montana/Tornado, Volkswagen Saveiro and Fiat Strada.
In Western Europe, Škoda and Fiat have, on occasion, tried to engage the public's attention to this segment, with little success, as panel vans are more popular as light commercial vehicles in city areas, and Japanese compact pick-ups more capable in rural areas' rough terrains. In Eastern Europe, they were quite popular as commercial vehicles until the turn of the millennium, with makes such as Dacia and IZH offering cars for this segment up to 2004.
One of the smallest pickups to be produced in commercial quantities was the British Austin/Morris Mini Pickup. At a little over 3 meters in length, it was none the less quite popular as a practical, working truck, selling 58,000 vehicles between 1961 and 1983.
International was the first to introduced a crew cab pickup in 1957, followed by Ford with their 1965 F-250 (short bed) and F-350 (long bed), Dodge in the same era, and Chevrolet followed with their 1973 C/K. Japanese makes offered crew cab versions of their pick-ups from the mid-80s.
Four-door compact pickup trucks are quite popular outside North America, due to their increased passenger space and versatility in carrying non-rugged cargo. In the United States and Canada, however, four-door compact trucks have been very slow to catch on and are still quite rare. In recent years seat belt laws, requirements of insurance companies and fear of litigation have increased the demand for four door trucks which provide a safety belt for each passenger. Mexican four-door compact pickups are quite popular.
Most compact truck beds are approximately 50 in wide, and most full-size are between 60 in and 70 in wide, generally 48 in or slightly over between the wheel wells (minimum width).
General Motors calls this option sport-side, while Ford Motor Company dubs it flare-side.
In Australia, two common forms of ute exist. The American-style pickup ute which is popular with farmers, etc is usually a Japanese or Australian built ute, such as the Holden Rodeo, Toyota Hilux, etc. These are popular in a variety of forms – two and four-wheel drive, single or dual cab, integrated tray or flatbed. These kinds of vehicles are also common in New Zealand, where they are also referred to as utes. There is an extensive industry in rural areas building a huge variety of different ute backs and trays to fit standard chassis.
The other type of vehicle commonly referred to as a ute is quite different – a two-seater sporty version of typical saloon cars, featuring a ute-type integrated tray back, comparable to the American Chevrolet El Camino or Ford Ranchero. A typical modern-day example would be the Holden Commodore SS ute. Construction is semi-monocoque, with the front end sharing the unitary construction of the saloon car on which they are based, but featuring a more conventional chassis at the rear. The vehicle is optimised for carrying loads in rural Australia which tend to be very flat, although in other environments the vehicles have somewhat questionable value as most feature very low ground clearance, wide road tyres and so forth. Many young urban drivers often customise their utes, resulting in many not willing to scratch the paintwork doing anything utilitarian, such as carrying a load.
The ute culture has been romanticised by country singers such as Lee Kernaghan, who has written odes to the ute such as She's My Ute, Scrubbabashin, Baptise The Ute and Love Shack. Kernaghan has commented, "Prior to such as Boys From The Bush, the ute was very much a work vehicle, devoid of glamour. But I think songs like Boys From the Bush and She's My Ute kind of said, 'It's okay to drive a ute.'"
Thailand is also the world's second largest market for pickup trucks, after the United States. 400,000 pickups were sold there in 2005.
The largest pickup market in Europe is Portugal, where crew cab 4WD pickups have somewhat replaced SUVs as offroad vehicles, after a change in taxation removed light commercial vehicle status from SUVs. The introduction of more powerful engines in pickups, benefitting from variable nozzle turbochargers and common rail direct injection technology, have made these cars interesting prospects in the eyes of the public.
In the United Kingdom, France and Germany, pickups are rarely seen and carry little cultural significance. While British environmentalists tend to object to large cars, their focus is usually aimed at the more common people carriers and especially on the very popular 4x4s (SUVs in American English).
In Guadalajara, Mexico, pick-ups are widely used by the police departments of the 5 municipalities, as they allow them to carry safely up to 6 policemen instead of the normal 2 that can fit inside a regular squad car.
Pickup (bil) | Pritschenwagen | Camionnette | Pick-up (veicolo) | Pick-up | ピックアップトラック | Pick-up | Pickup | Пикап
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