Johnor,
that sounds ok. Will they be Horizontal polarization patches? I'll assume so.
There are four options;
In phase combiner (two patches point in same or opposite directions).
Out of phase combiner (two patches point in same or opposite directions).
In phase combiner, antennas facing the same direction gives deep antenna pattern nulls frontward and backwards (assumes the ground plane in direction of the car front to back).
Similar but opposite results as described above, if you use the out of phase combiner.
In phase combiner with antennas facing opposite directions gives peaks front and back, and bumps in the 10-40 degree zone either side of front and back if you have a large ground plane. If the ground plane is very short, you minimize those 10-40 degree bumps. A short ground plane idea mimics the patch on a cylinder idea flattened. It may be best to keep the ground plane small then, face the antennas opposite and use an in-phase combiner. If you don't want to buy a combiner, you can take one coax. and solder it to two coaxes, i.e. one 50 ohm to two 50 ohmers (= 25 ohms). With short lengths of line you can match into your patch pair by moving the location of the feed. I've seen that done before to save space and cost.
Plus, your car hood is going to make some odd antenna patterns if you look upward due to the roof energy reradiating.
kchiggins.