Wheels (Australia)

Retro

A focus on simplicity and functional­ity kept the 2CV relevant for more than 40 years

- WORDS MICHAEL STAHL

Citroen 2CV

Inspired by Henry Ford, Andre Citroen launched his first car in 1919 and, just 10 years later, was producing more than 100,000 cars and trucks annually. However, the Great Depression of 1929 slammed Citroen, which hung its hopes on a highly advanced new model for 1934. The Traction Avant would remain in production until 1957, but it came too late to save Andre Citroen, who ceded his business to Michelin in late-1934 and died in July 1935.

In 1936, new Citroen boss Pierre Boulanger laid out yet another design so advanced, it too would hold up for decades. Codenamed Très Petit Voiture (very small car), but officially ‘2CV’ (deux chevaux, for two horsepower), only 250 prototypes – with liquid-cooled, flat-twin engines – were built before World War II intervened. Production would not commence until 1949.

Brilliant (and beetle-shaped) in the way of another ‘people’s car’, the 2CV was designed to the brief of ‘four wheels under an umbrella’. The sub-500kg four-door production version had an air-cooled, flattwin engine (initially of 375cc), long-travel suspension and removable seats. The four-speed manual gearbox was distinctiv­e for its horizontal ‘umbrella handle’ gearshift.

Famously, Boulanger had specified that the 2CV be capable of driving a basket of eggs over a ploughed field without breaking any. Its suspension delivered, with the front and rear wheels each operating (via tie-rods) a longitudin­al extension spring. These springs met headto-head within a sealed cylinder (the ‘longeron’), with pistons at each head maintainin­g a small air chamber between.

When the front wheel struck a bump, it pulled down on the rear wheel, so the car effectivel­y rode up and over obstructio­ns.

Economy and reliabilit­y were paramount: the windscreen wipers were driven by the speedomete­r cable; the engine cooling fan was bolted directly to the crankshaft; the doors lifted off on vertical pins; the canvas roof rolled back; the seats could be removed in a few seconds.

A farmer could transform the 2CV into a mobile platform and, via the hand throttle, transport hay bales or sick livestock.

The 2CV had minimal evolution over the years, most notable being the engine capacity increasing to 425cc in 1955 and 602cc in 1970. Several body variants were added, including the Fourgonett­e panel van, the more stylish Dyane and rebodied Ami, the Moke-like Mehari and the military Baby Brousse.

When production ended on July 27, 1990, precisely 3,867,932 2CV sedans had been built, that tally rising to 8,572,216 counting derivative­s.

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