Cool little car...a Citroen 2CV
Citroën 2CV
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
Citroën 2CV (
French:
"deux chevaux" i.e. "deux chevaux-vapeur" (lit. 'steam horses'), "two
tax horsepower") was an
economy car produced by the French car manufacturer
Citroën between 1948 and 1990.
[1]
It was technologically advanced and innovative, but with
uncompromisingly utilitarian unconventional looks, and deceptively
simple
Bauhaus and
Junkers early all metal aircraft inspired bodywork (corrugated for added strength without added weight),
[3][4][5]
that belied the sheer quality of its underlying engineering. It was
designed to motorise the large number of small-holder farmers in 1930s
France, who were still using horses and carts. It is considered one of
Citroën's most
iconic cars. In 1953
Autocar
in a technical review of the car wrote of "the extraordinary ingenuity
of this design, which is undoubtedly the most original since the
Model T Ford".
[6] It was described by
Car Magazine journalist and author
L. J. K. Setright as "the most intelligent application of minimalism ever to succeed as a car".
[4] It was designed for low cost, simplicity of use and maintenance, versatility, reliability, low fuel consumption and
off-road driving.
For this it had a light, easily serviceable engine, extremely soft long
travel suspension (with height adjustment by lengthening/shortening of
tie rods)
[5] high ground clearance, and for oversized loads a car-wide canvas
sunroof, which (until 1955) also covered the boot.
During a production run of 42 years between 1948 and 1990, 3,872,583
2CVs were produced, plus 1,246,306 Fourgonnettes (small 2CV delivery
vans), as well as spawning mechanically identical vehicles including the
Ami: 1,840,396; the
Dyane: 1,444,583; the
Acadiane: 253,393; and the
Mehari: 144,953, a grand total of 8,756,688, of which there are still 3,382 on the road in the UK as of January 2013.
[7]
From 1988 onwards, production took place in Portugal (
Mangualde)
rather than in France. This arrangement lasted for two years until 2CV
production halted. Portuguese built cars, especially those from when
production was winding down, have a reputation in the UK for being much
less well made and more prone to corrosion than those made in France.
[8][9][10] Paradoxically according to Citroën, the Portuguese plant was more up-to-date than the one in
Levallois near Paris, and Portuguese 2CV manufacturing was to higher quality standards.
[11]
Was cruising around Vancouver...ended up at Spanish Banks, and playing with the new Canon 100-400 lens.
You can easily see how the image is compressed here. It's what I was looking for.
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