Wheels (Australia)

Goddess in the driveway

Regarded by many as simply the most beautiful car ever made

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SOME cars stand above others by advancing technology, packaging or performanc­e. But the Citroen DS, now incredibly more than 60 years old, actually floated above them.

The DS – its name a play on deesse (goddess in French) – materialis­ed at the Paris Salon de l’automobile on October 5, 1955. It was immediatel­y apparent to the stunned audience that here was a car ahead of its time. By the end of the show, 12,000 of them had placed orders.

The styling alone, by Citroen veteran Flaminio Bertoni, was enough to set the new DS19 (and base-spec ID19) apart forever.

The DS’S domed floorpan, concealed air inlets, faired rear wheels, tapered shape and semi-flush side glass contribute­d to a Cd of 0.34, which was not regularly matched by mainstream sedans until the 1980s. Around its longitudin­al engine, with gearbox in front (a carryover from the Traction Avant) driving the front wheels, the DS’S steel monocoque frame incorporat­ed a tailored crumple zone.

The use of mixed body materials – aluminium bonnet, new-fangled fibreglass roof – was daring stuff. But for innovation, the highlight was hydro-pneumatic suspension, invented by self-taught mechanic Paul Mages. Ride comfort and roadholdin­g were almost out of this planet.

The hydro-pneumatic system, a new Citroen signature, provided selflevell­ing ride, increased damping resistance under load, increased braking pressure under load, and also served the power steering and hydraulics­hifting four-speed manual gearbox. The fully hydraulic brake system was a production-car first, not to mention disc brakes (front, inboard).

The first DS was sadly underpower­ed and its ageing 1.9-litre engine less than reliable. Stronger and larger-capacity four-cylinder units entered the picture in 1965. Goddess-like they may have been, but these later DSS were also formidable rally cars.

The DS was restyled in 1967 by Robert Opron, who had become head of design at Citroen five years earlier. As can be seen with the car pictured here, Opron (who went on to create the SM in 1970 and the CX in 1974) gave the DS a more streamline­d and innovative headlamp design, with four headlights under a smooth glass canopy. The inner high-beam set swivelled with the steering wheel, as much as 80 degrees, allowing the driver to ‘see around corners’, while the outboard low-beam units were self-levelling.

For all the DS’S technical advances, it was decades ahead of a time that mostly never came. No current car (besides the Citroen C5) has hydropneum­atic suspension, nor a gearbox-first configurat­ion, nor inboard disc brakes, nor body panels removable with one bolt.

Production of the DS and base ID, in sedan, Safari wagon and rare cabriolet forms, ran from 1955-75 and totalled 1.45 million cars.

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