Center console (automobile)

The center console of a Volkswagen Passat featuring a floor mounted gear selector.
The center console of a Tesla Model X featuring a touch screen display.

The center console (American English) or centre console in an automobile consists of the control-bearing surfaces in the center of the front of the vehicle interior. The term is applied to the area beginning in the dashboard and continuing beneath it, and often merging with the transmission tunnel which runs between the front driver's and passenger's seats of many vehicles.

Traditionally, vehicles with a gear stick have placed this control where the two areas of console and tunnel merge, or at the rear-most end of the console in front-wheel-drive vehicles without transmission tunnels.[1] In some modern vehicles – particularly vans – the gear stick is mounted in the front, more vertical part of the center console to be within better reach of the driver without requiring a long stalk mounted on the steering column.

Increasingly, center consoles include a wide variety of storage compartments and cupholders, some of them with a refrigerator,[2] in addition to the more traditional use as purely a surface for instrumentation (e.g., outside temperature display) and controls (car audio).

  1. ^ "Finding Out, part two: Boxer vs Countach vs 911 Turbo vs Aston Vantage (CAR archive, 1984)". CAR Magazine. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  2. ^ Ford Flex Platinum Edition, available second row refrigerated console

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