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Marque: Citroën - Company History & Models - Cars By Brand

Citroën

Citroën

In the early years of the 20th Century, André Citroën ran a gear cutting business in Paris (a firm he had established with Jacques Hinstin), but he also became closely involved with the car manufacturer Mors. Indeed in 1908 he was called upon to manage and re structure this company when it hit financial difficulties. During a visit to America in 1912, Citroën studied the advanced mass production…

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Citroën SM

Citroën SM

PRICE: £4000-£18,000

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Fast Facts

  • Produced:
    1972-75
  • Bodywork:
    Two-door fixed head coupé (some hybrids also made)
  • Engine:
    Twin-overhead camshafts per cylinder bank Maserati V6 2670cc 170bhp; (carburettors) or 178bhp (fuel injection)
  • 0-60 mph:
    9.3+ sec
  • Top Speed:
    135 mph

PAST: Citroen’s stab at making a supercar was aided by buying up Maserati. Launched in 1970, again it was years ahead of its time (four cam engine, hydraulic chassis, steered headlamps, carbon fibre wheels) Fuel injection employed and a 3-litre automatic for ‘73. Imports to the UK stopped in 1975 after Peugeot buy out. Fewer than 13,000 were built in total.

PRESENT: A splendid tourer rather than sports coupe, thanks to its size and weight, that was a favourite with many racing drivers at the time as road transport. Handling takes real getting used to and SM was only made in LHD form.

FUTURE: One for the purist but a car that will continue to appreciate – right now they are exceptional value. That said resto complexity and costly parts negate any savings upfront.

Citroën 2CV/Bijou

Citroën 2CV/Bijou

PRICE: £500-£3000

Fast Facts

  • Produced:
    1948-90
  • Bodywork:
    Four-door saloon/cabriolet
  • Engine:
    Overhead valve air-cooled twin-cylinder 375cc 9bhp; 425cc 12bhp; 602cc 24bhp (later examples 29bhp)
  • 0-60 mph:
    602cc 32+ sec; (29 bhp versions 27+ sec)
  • Top Speed:
    375cc: 40+ mph; 425cc: 50 mph (later examples 60+ mph); 602cc: 70+ mph
  • MPG:
    40-60 mpg

PAST: Cheap and minimalistic the essential concept remained unchanged from 1948 although the legendary ‘corrugated’ bonnet was swapped in favour of plain panelling in 1961 and imports to Britain in quantity of 602cc 2CVs did not commence until 1974. Special Edition Charleston versions arrived in 1981, and from 1982 customers could choose between basic Club and more opulent Special models. For British buyers, the end of the production road came in 1990.

PRESENT: The original Tin Snail is possibly more desirable than ever in these stark days! Super practical and economical, the severe lack of power is no real hardship as they cruise ok and handle well. Basic but that’s their charm. Dyane is much underrated.

FUTURE: Very popular with similar support, prices are also steadily rising and you can have one built to spec.

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