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It was distinguished by luxury features including a carpeted rear cargo area with split-folding second row bench seats trimmed with chrome covered strips of steel, and from 1968 forward, simulated woodgrain paneling on the body sides and tailgate, a feature also associated with somewhat competitive top-shelf station wagons such as the AMC ...
Chevrolet has added a bench seat option for the 2025 Tahoe and Suburban; Land Rover offers a front-row jump seat in the Discovery; and Hyundai even showcased a bench seat option for the newly ...
The GMC Acadia now has 5, 6, and 7 passenger configurations arranged respectively like either two front bucket seats and one rear bench seat; two bucket seats up front, two buckets in the second row, and two seats in the rear row; or two front bucket seats, one second row bench seat, and two rear seats in the third row. The second generation ...
Fiat 600 Multipla with bench seat 1967 AMC Ambassador with a reclining front bench seat offering room and seat belts for three adults. A bench seat is a full width continuous pad forming the front seat of automobiles. The second row of seating in most sedans is usually a bench. The third row of most SUVs and minivans, which may be forward ...
In a change from the previous generation, the dashboard was fitted with a glovebox. The second row of seats was offered in two configurations; a bench seat was standard, with "Quad Command" second-row bucket seats offered as an option for the Town & Country (and the highest-trim Voyager/Caravan); for 1992, the latter design was made standard. [11]
The front bench seat was split, with two seats on the driver's side and a single seat on the passenger side, which slid forward for access to the rear two rows of seats. The second row was a "2/3" seat, requiring occupants to move past the front passenger seat, as well as the second-row seats to access the third row.
The Chrysler Town & Country dropped its second-row bench seat in favor of second-row bucket seats (in line with other high-content minivans and luxury conversion vans). Marketed as "Quad Command" seats, the seven-passenger configuration was an option on higher-trim (LE and LX/ES) Dodge and Plymouth vans.
The seven-passenger included two bucket seats with attached armrests and open floor space between them in the front, a two-person bench seat in the second row, and a three-person bench seat in the back row. The two bench seats in the rear were independently removable, and the large three-person bench could also be installed in the second-row ...