Spec just call it whatever you want.... I mean people call their modern fancy SUV a "car", even though it's a small truck. So calling a Sedan a Coupé is a minor adjustment in comparison...in my view.
Actually, most modern SUV's are cars, not trucks. A truck has a separated chassis with the cabin mounted on top, a car has the chassis integrated into the body.
McBryce.
So that's saying a car can't have a chassis or else it's a truck ?!
Sorry but that's ridiculous and just not true at all my dear !!!
A car has never been defined by the lack of chassis !
Actually the first cars a 100 years ago ALL had a chassis ! Most auto makers would just sell you a bare chassis, then it was up to you to take your chassis to a dedicated coach builder and ask him to make a body of your liking and stick it to that chassis !
In more recent times the Citroen CX and Citroen 2CV had a chassis, are these trucks ?
Every British or Italian sports car under the sun had a body on frame/chassis construction... even today any Lotus car is still a fiber glass body on an epoxy glued extruded aluminium chassis.
Even modern lamborghinis as well I think. Not sure about about modern Ferraris... but you get the picture !
A vehicle having a body on frame is nothing to do with being a car or a truck !
It only has to do with design choices, themselves dictated by many factors...
For low volume sports cars, body on frame is what makes most economical sense as less expensive tooling required and easier to cobble together with cheap tools in a small workshop. Just a jig some steel tubes and a welder and off you go. Plus a chassis makesq it easy to have the required stiffness that then allows you to achieve good dynamics.
Trucks have a chassis because that's cheaper and easier to achieve the required stiffness and load bearing capability this way, that's all...
Most modern cars having a unibody construction is merely because they are all built on a budget no matter what the selling price is, and a unibody is by far what's the cheapest to manufacture for a HIGH volume car, that is all. But as soon as you look into niche/low volume cars, then unibody is out of the question because of the tooling costs, and then hand building a chassis then becomes the economically viable option. More labour but very liitle tooling costs. Sports cars being sold for a lot of money usually, it can pay for the extra labour involved no problem. For mass produced cars labour is critical but tooling cost is not because you make millions of cars to recoup your investment, so in this case unibody is what makes financial sense.
In the USA where there are millions of pick-up trucks, for many decades, I am sure you can find many of them of all vintages, that have/had a unibody construction, because although they were trucks, they were not heavy duty enough to warrant a super stiff chassis, plus they sold enough of them to make a unibody the most sensible manufacturing option.