Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What kind of car does a wedding car usually use?

What kind of car does a wedding car usually use?

The wedding car usually uses Mercedes-Benz BMW Audi.

The whole wedding motorcade cannot be 13 or14; Avoid Santana, Passat, Chevrolet, Buick, etc. For example, the car in front is a Mercedes-Benz, and finally a Santana is a funeral; Passat is undertaker, Chevrolet comes to the crossroads in front of the car, Buick doesn't have to wait.

Newcomers are very particular about getting on and off;

From the perspective of geomantic omen, the first driver's order of getting off is also particular. The bride and groom sit in the back seat of the wedding car, and the best man usually sits in the co-pilot position. When the first bus arrives at the wedding venue, the best man first gets off and goes around the left back door at the back to open the door for the groom, and then the groom goes around the right back door at the front to open the door for the bride and help her get off.

Although there are many kinds of vehicles, their structures are similar. This should be said to be the credit of standardization and the need of large-scale production line. With the development of society, the progress of science and technology and the change of demand, the appearance of railway vehicles has also begun to change, especially the passenger cars are no longer the same old faces. However, their basic structure has not changed obviously, but the specific parts have more scientific and advanced structural design.

Generally speaking, the basic structure of a vehicle consists of five parts: body, underframe, running gear, coupler buffer device and braking device.

The car body is the part of the vehicle carrying goods or passengers, and it is also the basis for installing and connecting other parts of the vehicle. The bodies of early vehicles were mostly wooden structures, supplemented by steel plates and bow bars. Modern automobile body is mainly steel structure or light metal structure.