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What is a “shooting brake” in reference to cars?

Question by james t: What is a “shooting brake” in reference to cars?
Audi has a new concept called the Shooting Brake and I’ve heard the term also used in reference to an old Lotus Elan converted to an estate [or "station wagon"]. What does it mean? Where did the term come from?

Best answer:

Answer by jon_wayne89
Shooting-brake

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Shooting brake)

Shooting-brake is a car body style indicating luxury estate cars built for use by hunters.

The body was usually custom built. An early manufacturer of shooting brakes was Albion Motors of Scotland. There are existing examples of custom-built Bentley S2, Mercedes 300, and also the Aston Martin DBS Shooting Brake.

VG, a small US coachbuilder, offers a model named VGD Shooting Brake.

Some modern manufacturers, such as Audi, have recently referred to some concept cars as shooting brakes, although today the term may be used to refer to any estate car and in Europe some motor manufacturers refer to the estate bodies of their line-up as the brake or break – the spelling depending on the country. The Ford Scorpio was a modern example of this usage.

A brake, also known as a break, was a type of horse-drawn carriage used in the nineteenth and early 20th centuries. It was a large or small, open-topped vehicle with four wheels and designed for country use . The form usually met, the “shooting brake”, was designed to carry the driver and a gamekeeper at the front, facing forward and up to six sportsmen on longditudinal benches, with their dogs, guns and game carried alongside in slat-sided racks.

In the early 19th century, a break was a large carriage-frame with no body, used for “breaking in” young horses. By the late 19th century the meaning had been extended to also mean a large waggonette.

Shooting-brake.com, a number of images of shooting brakes

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!



 

2 Users Response In " What is a “shooting brake” in reference to cars? "

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grasshoppah says in January 29th 2012 at 1:11 pm    

it is and english fancy pants way of saying “station wagon” usually a woody…

mr wizard says in January 29th 2012 at 1:46 pm    

Before the station wagon became a popular car design in england, several coach builders would convert an english saloon (sedan )into a station wagon. since this was expensive, only rich nobs could afford them. you couldn’t call it a STATION wagon like in the US since Nobs didn’t take the train to work (A NOB DOSEN’T WORK, HE SPENDS MONEY STOLEN BY HIS GRANDFATHER FROM INDIA OR SOUTH AFRICA) So you called it a shooting brake, to sit in and wait for the grooms to drive the deer to where he could shoot it.
After awhile, the station wagon became somewhat lower class and was not bespoke, but came from the Auto Works. HOWEVER, there was still some of the old cachet’ and they were named “Estates”, even if they were used to take you from the out of town Estates (US name: suburb subdivision) to a train or tram to the City.

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