Weird & wonderful windows

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WEIRD & WONDERFUL WINDOWS

WORDS: OLLIE KEW

TOPGEAR TOP 9

01 Peugeot RCZ

The original TT was a styling classic, but Audi never really innovated it afterwards. Peugeot was brave enough to fit a double bubble roof and humped rear window which apparently improved airflow over the RCZ. And gave it some properly head turning clout.

02 Citroen C6

The beautiful Citroen C6 was the last big luxury barge to wear the double chevron badge before ‘DS’ became a thing. The inwardly curved glass allowed Citroen to design a conventional saloon-booted car with the sleekier profile of a hatchback. Who needs a rear wiper?

03 Chevy Corvette Stingray C2

The second-gen Corvette’s split rear window may have been inspired by the iconic ‘spine’ of the Bugatti 57SC, but the Stingray’s interpretation is arguably the more famous. It only appeared on the 1963 car, being phased out the following year due to complaints over the shoddy rear visibility.

04 Maybach 62

The strangle mullion window sunroof atop the first Maybach comeback was something of a technological triumph: glass which could change colour. At the touch of a button, the rear seat passengers could turn the window from clear to a dark blue opaque tint, to block out the sun.

05Volkswagen Beetle

Think ‘split screen Volkswagen’ and most folks will scroll to a mental image of the famous windscreens on the T2 microbus, but the Beetle began life with two back windows. It switched from a split to single rear window in 1953, for easier production and better rear visibility.

06 Land Rover Defender

Yes, you could fold down the windscreen on the earlier cars. But that’s not the window

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