Cool Wall - Deux chevaux
But what fun! :woohoo:
All the seats come out for a picnic, the roof comes off, and so do the panels. The only car that you need to take a 'Stugeron' to drive due to seasickness on the corners. You can take a pig to the market, carry a whole family of Whippets and a picnic hamper at the same time! Maybe it isn't a 'babe magnet' but I think Clemence Poesy would be happy to ride with you! :broon:
Also it would be hard to get done for speeding as no self respecting Judge would ever believe it!
Yes it's slow...well actually slower than slow..but it's such a charactor and fun to drive...I know it rots, but you can replace bits so easily....and the lady drivers can hang their handbags on the odd gear lever. Cooooool
But, is it cool?
To see all the Cool Wall cars click on this link :yesnod:
All the cars are now in the new Cool Wall section in the T-Bar :broon:
'I started off with nuthin and still got most of it left!'
You know, I spent a fortune on deodorant before I realised
that people didn't like me anyway!
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Dan
I may not always be right..... BUT I am NEVER wrong lol
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'I started off with nuthin and still got most of it left!'
You know, I spent a fortune on deodorant before I realised
that people didn't like me anyway!
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Dan
I may not always be right..... BUT I am NEVER wrong lol
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- Leigh Ping
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Pierre Boulanger, the father of the 2CV, set a brief to his Chief Engineer, Maurice Broglie, for a new car to be codenamed "Becassine" (snipe) to be an "umbrella on wheels" to carry two farmers, along with 50kg. of potatoes or a small barrel of wine at a maximum speed of 60 km/hr. It must travel in good comfort over rough rural roads. Economy was to be a priority - less than 3 litres of petrol was to be used to cover 100 km., and the car must cost less than one third of the then current Traction Avant.
By 1936, a fullsize wooden mock-up had been made. Boulanger was tall, and was unhappy with the headroom. He ruled that the car should be modified to allow him to drive wearing a hat. A first prototype appeared early in 1937. The body was aluminium for lightness, wheels were magnesium, the windows made of mica. Hammock- like seats were suspended from the roof by cables. Since the new engine had not been tested, a BMW 500 cc. motorcycle engine was used instead, the kickstart being operated by the starting handle.
By the end of 1937, 20 prototypes had been produced. Secrecy was important to the project, and cars were tested at Bois de Meudon, near Paris. An old chateux at La Ferte-Vidame, east of Paris, had the grounds converted to a 2.5km. test track.
With the occupation of France, Boulanger was concerned the project would fall into the hands of the Germans. He ordered the remaining cars to be destroyed. However, development continued in secret and some prototypes survived. The aluminium body was finally shelved in favour of light guage steel. The innovative suspension for which Boulanger defined a specification to enable the car to carry a basket of eggs without breakage across a ploughed field was developed, electric start was added, a single headlight was deemed sufficient initially bit was later given a partner, and a heating system was added.
So, on the 7th October 1948, at the 35th Salon de l`Automobile, after a gestation period of 13 years, the 2cv was born. The press and public found the car very strange but irresistable. The car was however accepted as being well needed in austere post-war France, and when production started in earnest in 1949, demand was very heavy. Citroen had cornered a niche market, a market that other manufacturers did not know existed. The car was very comfortable, it could be driven up and down steps at 20mph, across ploughed fields. It rapidly became part of the fabric of French life. Farmers and country dwellers were the primary market, but town dwellers were also desperate to buy 2cvs. Demand exceeded supply. In 1949 only 924 cars were made but this rose to over 6000 the next year.
The rest as they say is history....
Which reminds me....
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- Rich in Vancouver
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Replied by Rich in Vancouver on topic Re: Cool Wall - Deux chevaux
Posted 12 years 8 months ago #43597Not fast, leaned like a Geordie on Saturday night, Had an umbrella handle shifter sticking out
of the middle of the dash, and you could see the road go by between the door and the body.
Great car!
They are very rare here as they were never officially imported, just a few private imports.
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Richard
1.8i Mk2 Solar Red, 16 inch square spoke wheels, MGFMania hood with zip-in glass rear window, DRLs, Kmaps ECU, Pipercross panel air filter, MGOC Supersports back box & some cockpit bling
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So yes I voted cool.
It isnt massive power that makes a car attractive to a really skilful driver. A few weeks a go i was parking the trusty Fiat with the owner of that Evo and F355 as passenger. We went past an 800cc Daewoo Matiz and that was the one car he mentioned. he used to have one bought for his wife who couldnt stand it. He just got hooked as driving it to the best it could achieve was so difficult and involving and you could do it on the way to work without the Plod helicoptor getting scambled. James Hunt drove an A35 van for the same reason.
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- talkingcars
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Home to black Alfa Romeo 159 3.2 V6 Q4 ,green MGF VVC and red MG Maestro T16.
MG - the friendly marque.
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- Luckymarine
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Retro even.
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