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Citroen 2Cvs

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sandyRoe | 11:58 Fri 31st May 2013 | Motoring
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There's a few featured on MSN. Why do they hold their price so well?
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Because they are now thought of as a classic car.
Quite rare these days sandy, you don't see many around now. Although imo they were a crap car with a motor bike engine.
^ that's insulting to motorbikes!
Very true, sorry about that chuck ;-)
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I saw one a month or so back and I thought the engine had a phut-phut tone about it.
They do "phut phut" as they are only two cylinder engines... to be fair to Tony's comment, the engine was largely a copy of the BMW 2 cylinder motorbike engine.
I think they were banned in Sweden a few years ago as being unsafe.
Now you know why sandy lol. If I remember correctly they had a small twin cylinder engine fitted.
I wanted a citroen 2cv dolly when I was a child, it looked like a mobile barber shop. I think they are quirky looking and rare so the price will go up
However sandy, this one is pretty quick !.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iq0_pIwARUE
They are cool.

They have chic and panache.

The only car at the moment that has so much style is the Fiat 500.
Leave it out jj, they were bloody rubbish, well except for the one in the drag racing vid.
Well crap rather depends on the criteria on which you are judging

Yes if you are a Jeremy Clarkeson clone who want's Power and luxury.

If you're looking for a car that is simple and cheap to maintain, returns good mileage an will drive over rough ground then a Ferrari is a crap car!

Whether a car is crap or not rather depends on how well it fulfills it's design goals.

A 2CV was famously designed pre war to be able to carry two farmers, 50kg of potatoes and a basket of eggs across rough roads without breaking any of them at 50km/h

And by that criteria it suceeded brilliantly.

In modern terms classic cars do hold their prices well partly because there are a fixed (or declining) number of them and they continue to appeal.

I believe that appeal is partly to do with their character (and the 2 CV has that in spades) and their simplicity (many classic cars can be rebuilt with a limited toolbox in an average garage)

The key thing is that certain classics have a large enough base that parts supply is not an issue specialists are common and the parts are remanufactured- 2CVs fall into that category.

If you take a more obscure car parts can be difficult - If you fail an MOT on a cracked windscreen on a 2CV you'll be able to just replace it, if the same thing happens on a fiat 130 say you'll be hunting for months to try and find somebody who has a wreck you can salvage parts from.

Tony, no no no, they were driven by stylish Parisian girls.
Mmmmmmm, maybe jj, doesn't change my opinion though.
I was about to say pretty much what jake did... they are crap if viewed by most modern standards, but when they were first built they meet their design criteria brilliantly.

A guy a know bought one about a year ago on the mistaken premise he would be able to drive it on a motorbike license (you actually can drive the pre 1954 ones on a bike license) when I informed him he wouldn't be able to drive the more recent one he'd got on a bike license he decided to keep it as it's value will escalate... he's already being offered 50% more than he bought it for after only 1 year!
Chuck, did the pre 54's have a kick start or no reverse gear then ?.
i thought they were all owned by social workers, and members of CND?
So did I dave, also some school teachers.
Tony... people that passed a motorbike test before a certain date have "grandfather rights" to heavy quadricycles, which are 4 wheeled vehicles with an unladen weight of under 550Kg and power of no more than about 20HP... which very early 2cv's meet the requirements (although I think it would have to be the van version of the 2cv) (the need to have a kickstart or no reverse isn't mentioned in the definition of a heavy quadricycle)

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