All cars have metal in them, but, as far as the body, no. Case in point, Corvette, fiberglass, then later composite, Cobra's are aluminum, and, back in the 60's, on the drag strips Ford, and Chevy were using aluminum, or fiberglass body pannels in some of their "competition only" vehicles. There is even an old, British, I think, sports car that has a wooden frame. A morgan, I believe it is. When manufacturers moved away, back then, from metal body parts it was usually for weight saving, competition purposes. Not safety, which was why most bodies were built of metal back then. Now days, technology has progressed to the level that they now have other materials that are even more safe than metal, and are used, again to save weight, but, for fuel saving abilities, rather than performance. Chuck.
No, they are made with metal.
Most classic American cars are made out of steel and aluminum. This is because steel and aluminum are sturdy and can withhold a beating and are easy to get dents out of.
Iron is the metal that is used to make domestic cars but sport cars or F1 cars might be made of carbonfiber
A type of metal made espically for cars :)
cars are made of a plastic based tin/copper material
Yes.
metal and plastic
They are made of metal. Steel, aluminum, copper, magnesium, and other metals.
Well..old cars they were made out of metal
Plastic and metal.
No one invented classic cars. In general, cars over the age of 25 years are considered antique or classic.
Cars were traditionally made out of steel and aluminum, but it is much more common to see cars with an abundance of fiberglass or plastic body panels.