1983 Citroen 2CV: Regular Car Reviews

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2017
  • This is a partial review of a 1983 Citroen 2CV. As an American, this was very weird!
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @liamobrien9451
    @liamobrien9451 Před 6 lety +243

    I live in rural France, and there are a surprising amount of these still driving around, some of them restored, but also some that have been driven by the same granny for the last 40 years

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety +14

      There's a few knocking around the village of Wirksworth in Derbyshire, which is somewhat logical as the place is pretty much a hippie artist commune with a few shops and additional housing for the people who work in them... Going by the general state of the exteriors (rotten but generally stickerbombed with evidence of past attendance at dozens of owner group meetups) and interiors (worn but immaculately kept with some evidence of DIY repair/replacement), they've also been in the same hands for decades.

    • @guillermoferraudi8750
      @guillermoferraudi8750 Před 2 lety +4

      I see these in South America.

  • @stueypooy22
    @stueypooy22 Před 7 lety +956

    "Don't even think about it going in, it'll feel normal, but the second you look at it feels weird" my gf said something to me similar to that.

  • @techpassion4126
    @techpassion4126 Před 7 lety +1657

    The Citroen 2CV,
    A car more French than garlic-flavoured toothpaste

    • @DukeNuggets69
      @DukeNuggets69 Před 7 lety +43

      French here, it's frenchier than Napoleon

    • @Mr365097
      @Mr365097 Před 7 lety +4

      +DukeNuggets69 or frenchier than a french kiss maybe?

    • @liverush24
      @liverush24 Před 7 lety +14

      TechPassion A car that's more French than Frenchy - the world French champion from the Parisian District of Little France, from where she manufactures berets which she then only sells to French people beneath the Eiffel Tower.

    • @nellyracer22
      @nellyracer22 Před 7 lety +9

      TechPassion then rinsing with a lovely Bordeaux and dabbing your mouth with croissant.

    • @liverush24
      @liverush24 Před 7 lety +4

      Tres bon.

  • @jamespatrick6939
    @jamespatrick6939 Před 7 lety +630

    Citroen 2CV, the perfect mix between picnics and wine and casual provincial racism

    • @utrak
      @utrak Před 7 lety +72

      très bien

    • @DrinkmoWater.
      @DrinkmoWater. Před 7 lety +22

      Or taking a shower in your favorite cereal but definitely milk spraying ON you instead... yup

    • @TrueRetroflection
      @TrueRetroflection Před 5 lety +4

      The best kind of racism!

    • @nemergix1707
      @nemergix1707 Před 5 lety +5

      As a french , you coudn't be more right

  • @Siknik64
    @Siknik64 Před 7 lety +266

    You are having one HELL of a time explaining that gear shifter.

    • @surfside75
      @surfside75 Před 4 lety +2

      Evan today, this is so funny😂

    • @KFCGAMING55
      @KFCGAMING55 Před 4 lety +2

      I thought I was having a stroke when I heard that

    • @fraserguy4680
      @fraserguy4680 Před 3 lety

      I learned to drive in a 2cv. 3rd to 4th was tricky I seem to remember. It’s different to any other car I’ve driven..great fun.

  • @jonathankfouri3431
    @jonathankfouri3431 Před 2 lety +30

    Did a college report on this car for my history of auto class, and I learned it's arguably the most well designed car of all time. Few cars have ever been so well designed around the intended and even unintended user, regardless of how you feel about the styling. I gained a huge appreciation for it.

  • @anthonyowen1556
    @anthonyowen1556 Před 6 lety +179

    The best car ever made in the world.
    I've driven all over the world in them, even off road. In Afghanistan (before the war) 4 wheel drive (Land Rover etc) and 2CV's were the only cars allowed to go up into the mountains in the north, because they were the only cars which could cope with the conditions, and if they couldn't they were so light that all you needed to do was round up a crowd and get them to carry the car to where the track was a little more stable.
    And it may have only been 609cc, but I had mine up over 90 mph on several occasions (speed measured by a police radar trap, who then let me off as he said no one would believe it if they took me to court).
    If you took the roof and the doors off (less than five minutes work) it was like riding a motor bike, and all the seats came out (again, in less than five minutes) if you wanted to sit on the side of the road and have a picnic in comfort!!
    They even made a dual engine four wheel drive version (2CV Safari) which could drive up a 45 degree sand dune. There was a competition on the south coast of England where it competed against Land Rovers and Mercedes 4WD, but they stopped the competition when the other cars could no longer make it up the slope but the CV was still going strong - it was too embarrassing for the other car makers (to be fair, though, the dual engine 2CV was so noisy you couldn't hear anyone speak who was sitting next to you).

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety +16

      Until you mentioned the Safari at the end, I assumed that's the one you meant for Afghanistan. IIRC they literally just took a whole additional drivetrain and installed it at the rear, with extended linkages connected to the throttle, clutch and gearshift up front ... and a "backwards" cam so that the rear engine would produce drive in the same direction without needing a different gearbox or transfer case. Also I believe it showed up in some film (one of the 60s Madeline series?) where a pair of twin nuns had one, but setup with two normally forward-running engines, two sets of controls, rear wheel steering and extra lights so it could be driven (with the normal amount of power) in either direction without turning round. No idea why, but it seemed important for the plot...
      Anyway the 2WD one working alongside Landies doesn't surprise me too much. If you've got decent ground clearance and a lightweight body, a low end FWD car can actually be a pretty decent offroader. I've experienced such on holidays as a kid... the cheap and -cheerful- nasty SEAT Marbellas my parents would hire classified as such and they worked great for hacking off along dirt tracks or even across trackless country on e.g. Lanzarote to find "secret" beaches ... occasionally leaving actual mini offroaders like the Suzuki Vitara (being driven by people with no clue about how to tackle offroad driving) in their wake. Ditto snowy conditions in the UK. A simple, light car dances across the unmade surface, whilst a heavier one ends up ploughing through and getting stuck instead (which can be illustrated with the "density" of cars in my history vs their propensity for becoming stranded in snowy weather; the lighter ones have always got me through, whilst the heavy ones I've had to abandon and take off on foot instead).
      And I've found similar to be true of rental scooters myself ... so long as their underbone isn't too low to the ground, you can treat them pretty much like they're scramblers and get away with it, because they're too light to get bogged down or throw you dangerously off course by tramlining into ruts in the path, and the balance of weight between machine and rider means you can fling them around much more like an MTB than a heavier motorbike. (...and my relatively light 125 actually works alright on snow, which was a surprise)

    • @lapinmalin8626
      @lapinmalin8626 Před 3 lety +5

      if you talk about 2CV Sahara is the most expensive 2CV
      a model was sold at 110 000€

    • @jama211
      @jama211 Před 2 lety +1

      90kph maybe, not 90 mph, the engine literally won't rev anywhere near that in top gear. More likely the trap was badly calibrated.

    • @dodecahedron1
      @dodecahedron1 Před rokem

      there are also aftermarket 4wd conversions that use the mehari's chassis and more conventional 4wd system

  • @d33b33
    @d33b33 Před 7 lety +189

    These are too alien for the American viewer. They're pretty much designed to be driven flat out all the time, gear selection determines your speed, gear selection is dictated by road condition (uphill, downhill, corner). They have no mass in the roof so they won't roll over under any circumstance, and if you could, you get one for free, or so the introductionary ad went.
    Turns out you could roll one if you're a big lad and slam your ass into the center pillar on a sharp right hand turn, so that ad was dropped. I tried to topple one in the 90s with my drunk friend when these were cheap as dirt in Europe. We fell asleep instead.

    • @bryanbalyeat2773
      @bryanbalyeat2773 Před 7 lety +2

      omg hydrocortisone cream first, corn starch second

    • @artemusprine
      @artemusprine Před 2 lety +2

      They would be perfect on the Appalachian back roads, but we have to occasionally drive the highways too.

  • @da0908
    @da0908 Před 7 lety +1170

    Listening to Mr. Regular trying to explain this gear shifter is what I imagine autism feels like.

    • @lucywucyyy
      @lucywucyyy Před 7 lety +85

      bout right

    • @0YouCanCallMeAl0
      @0YouCanCallMeAl0 Před 7 lety +2

      made my day bro, made my day...

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před 6 lety +33

      You... have no idea. Then again... gah.

    • @900108Chale
      @900108Chale Před 6 lety +1

      LOL

    • @Knightrem
      @Knightrem Před 6 lety +28

      He sounds like the out of breath auctioneer from that one car show video.

  • @OriginalBongoliath
    @OriginalBongoliath Před 7 lety +84

    I remember this as the car driven by Snoopy in Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown!

  • @chrisjfinlay
    @chrisjfinlay Před 7 lety +37

    I never really understood the 2CV growing up, I always thought "Who the hell would want this?"
    Then I went on a midnight tour of Paris in one, and it ll clicked. It was just so lovely to be in, especially in the old cobbled streets. Though maybe that was the free champagne talking.

  • @PoyimaMedia
    @PoyimaMedia Před 7 lety +56

    here in Argentina are a classic. I just repaired one last week. also, it's one of those cars we study on Industrial Design. It was designed basically having 3 point in view. it had to carry four grown men, with their hats on and with a rack of egg through the mud of the old French farm roads

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz Před 6 lety +7

      WITHOUT breaking a single egg!

    • @srfrg9707
      @srfrg9707 Před 4 lety +2

      Winged Thoughts *four cultivators wearing clogs ands hats...

  • @Damptarmac
    @Damptarmac Před 7 lety +100

    I think the complexity of explaining the simplicity of the gear lever design explains the complexity of the simplicity just fine.
    That gear lever is the maximum French I can think of.

    •  Před 6 lety +7

      "that's just a citroën thing"
      Like the radio being between the seats in some old models...

    • @rhodesianwojak2095
      @rhodesianwojak2095 Před 5 lety

      ^

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety +1

      The best way I've generally heard it described is as an umbrella handle sitting inside a drainpipe. Instead of tilting it in two dimensions, you push/pull and tilt it sideways.
      The gear pattern in this later model isn't the _maximum_ French, though, as it's been slightly normalised into the equivalent of a 4-speed dog-leg column shift, or a 3-speed with a fourth hastily bolted on, much like a lot of 4-speeds clumsily grew 5th gear "warts" in the late 80s.
      The original pattern was like a 3 on the tree... then to get to 4th you turned the lever to the right _whilst still in 3rd, THEN_ pushed it forwards. And getting out of 4th into neutral or a lower gear involved going through 3rd first. Which made the infamous "3rd gear unwinding" problem even worse...
      (somehow they designed it so reverse and third shared internal parts, presumably with the separate selectors clamping inwards around a common gearset, but only had poorly-immobilised single-screw-direction bolts holding them together, specialised for staying tight when driven forwards as the car would see much more 3rd gear action than most of the other gears; but this meant if you drove too much in reverse, it would make the fastenings come undone for both gears... so you were recommended to put it in R, kick it into motion fairly sharply, and immediately drop back into neutral and coast the rest of the way)

    • @user-he1rj1lr6k
      @user-he1rj1lr6k Před 4 lety

      اانل

    • @user-he1rj1lr6k
      @user-he1rj1lr6k Před 4 lety

      هبه

  • @BarrettMopar
    @BarrettMopar Před 7 lety +200

    The 2CV is a car I drove in Gran Turismo, and that was the first time I've ever been bored playing a GT game... but I'd LOVE to drive this in real life!

    • @Talasas
      @Talasas Před 7 lety +35

      It's really the type of driving experience that a car game can't capture sadly.

    • @earthpunk9848
      @earthpunk9848 Před 7 lety +1

      @Talasas Oh yeah? You've driven it?

    • @motorsportfangr
      @motorsportfangr Před 7 lety +15

      If you think the 2CV was boring you haven't driven the any of the 1880s Benz Motorwagens available.

    • @Michael_Shoemaker
      @Michael_Shoemaker Před 7 lety +6

      I'll call it a masochism.
      And yes. I tried to do a lap on Nurburgring in this.

    • @elryanoo
      @elryanoo Před 7 lety +1

      + Barrett Mopar driving one of these as fast as you can is frightening.

  • @TheCabillaud94
    @TheCabillaud94 Před 7 lety +778

    French here. you've seen nothing Mr.Regular. Nothing.
    We have WAY more.

    • @someonebald2022
      @someonebald2022 Před 7 lety +53

      Renault 4?

    • @burkezillar
      @burkezillar Před 7 lety +53

      French cars that actually work and don't break down?
      I'd like to see that!

    • @someonebald2022
      @someonebald2022 Před 7 lety +58

      to be honest there's not much to go wrong with a 2CV :)

    • @AaronMk91
      @AaronMk91 Před 7 lety +23

      RCR vs France when?

    • @SpaceCadet5100
      @SpaceCadet5100 Před 7 lety +81

      1 gen Twingo is truly a masterpiece

  • @aljazperc
    @aljazperc Před 7 lety +284

    Why didnt you mention bodyroll? This thing rolls like a bike in the corners, just in the opposite direction

    • @Damptarmac
      @Damptarmac Před 7 lety +19

      He did mention the eggs!

    • @aserta
      @aserta Před 7 lety +22

      Funny thing is, the bodyroll is hugely overstated. A properly rebuilt suspension system is not that bad. I've had the 'pleasure' of driving both examples on the same car, before and after a professional no money spared restoration.

    • @pixelghostclyde8717
      @pixelghostclyde8717 Před 7 lety +12

      *THE BODY ROLL WAS HORRIBLE ON A BRAND NEW CAR*, what are you talking about.

    • @henrietn
      @henrietn Před 7 lety +20

      Bodyroll was indeed horrific, but it was supersmooth, going over huge bumps and craters in the road, like they weren't even there. On a teamevent, we took 25 of these out on rough terrain, was like driving a rolls royce

    •  Před 6 lety +3

      even better than a rolls Hendrik, because you didn't care about the damage done to the cars, would cost nothing to repair anyway!

  • @rtankard
    @rtankard Před 7 lety +212

    I'm a Brit and all Brits mispronounce Citoën as 'Sitrone' and not 'Sit-row-en' as it should be. We also mispronounce Hyundai as 'Hi-un-die' and not 'Hun-day'. Personally I also mispronounce 'So fancy' as 'Sew Fauncy'. Sew very, very fauncy.

    • @deruebersau
      @deruebersau Před 7 lety +44

      Never give the French the satisfaction of hearing their words pronounced their way!

    • @alastairward2774
      @alastairward2774 Před 7 lety +16

      Robin Tankard Northern Ireland, where people drive Sitrins, Renallts and Pew-jots.

    • @PaulHojda
      @PaulHojda Před 7 lety +4

      Robin Tankard in Korean Hyundai is pronounced Heeun-deh

    • @aserta
      @aserta Před 7 lety +1

      I've always pronounced it Sitro-ein with a muted i and accented e. No French turned their heads on me so far.

    • @jamiehayward6960
      @jamiehayward6960 Před 7 lety +1

      Paul Hojda I've always used "hai-uhn-die

  • @brendanrogers1990
    @brendanrogers1990 Před 7 lety +27

    The suspension on the 2CV is hilarious. You can literally push one side of the car with one hand and it'll lean about 5-10 degrees.

  • @Fillipe.356
    @Fillipe.356 Před 7 lety +71

    go to britain
    drive french cars
    poetry

    • @another3997
      @another3997 Před 6 lety +1

      Fillipe356 Or... go to school and learn how to capitalise names of countries. 😉

    • @fduranthesee
      @fduranthesee Před 4 lety

      @@another3997 tsk tsk tsk

  • @rdbeyer
    @rdbeyer Před 7 lety +82

    RIP, Roger Moore. I love that chase.

    • @alfredvalrie5541
      @alfredvalrie5541 Před 7 lety +9

      rdbeyer "go backwards forwards quickly"--she explained the gear box in two secs better than rcr did in two minutes

    • @PershingDragoon
      @PershingDragoon Před 4 lety

      Best part of the bond franchise as a whole if you ask me.

    • @jashugg
      @jashugg Před 3 lety +3

      The two Peugeot 504s that chased Bond’s 2CV down the mountain are also pretty desirable cars today!

  • @samthemultimediaman
    @samthemultimediaman Před 6 lety +40

    i wish they still made simple bare-bones cars like this.

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 Před 4 lety +6

      Sam The Multimedia Man
      - Tata Nano comes to mind, honorable descendent of 2CV, VW Beetle, etc. An attempt to motorize people in a cheap way. A good idea who crashed head first in a poor but stupidly "posh" society. :-(

    • @tobyvision
      @tobyvision Před 3 lety +1

      I just want a left hand drive, AWD kei van. I'd drive it to the end of my days.

    • @datsunalzheimer
      @datsunalzheimer Před 3 lety

      Check out the new citroen ami

    • @kvltizt
      @kvltizt Před 2 lety

      Yeah, to an extent. I do like a bit of safety in the event of a crash lol

    • @Rapscallion2009
      @Rapscallion2009 Před rokem +1

      They almost do. It's just that regulation keeps them out of most markets in the developed world. Crash and emissions.

  • @pianoman3214
    @pianoman3214 Před 7 lety +292

    stereotypical french car... mmmm nothing says baguette more than this

    • @missingplugin9039
      @missingplugin9039 Před 7 lety +18

      Bruce_Jenner except a white flag.

    • @aserta
      @aserta Před 7 lety +19

      Reverse gears on tanks?

    • @utrak
      @utrak Před 7 lety +31

      they all have soft tops to make room for baguettes

    • @pimplaf
      @pimplaf Před 7 lety +1

      You're all idiots.

    • @zloychechen5150
      @zloychechen5150 Před 7 lety +8

      good. at least we're not french.

  • @HarvesterUT
    @HarvesterUT Před 7 lety +28

    Citroen 2CV: The car for the guy with the skinniest jeans.

  • @lecanap7552
    @lecanap7552 Před 7 lety +92

    I'm french, I'm 32 and it's the first car I drove ( I was 12 years old ). You have to be careful of the windows on bumpy roads, they kind of latch into a little spring in a rubber thingy. There's a plastic grill that clips on the front of the bonnet to reduce cold air from comming in, to help the engine in the winter. You can swap the engine with another citroën, the GS, you can even put an old bmw motorcycle engine in it. The 2 c.v. as mr Regular said, means 2 chevaux vapeur ( steam horses ) but french people call it "deux chevaux" ( two horses ). The suspensions on this car are so soft and long that you pratically can't roll it over. But this lovely little "pot de yaourt" (yogurt tub) or " boîte de sardine " ( tin of sardines ) has an archenemy, the Renault 4L. And if you like the lines of the 2c.v you should check it in the " charleston " paint, bordeaux and black ! Thank you for the review, it brings some memories and it's fun to watch you discorvering cars I know.

    • @nikolabegonja5490
      @nikolabegonja5490 Před 7 lety +7

      Yeah, the Renault 4 GTL is one of the more common cars where i live. Not really a vintage car, it's a "first car" car. And Mr. Regular was so confused with the gear stick and it's not that bad, i've used it in a Renault 4 before.

    • @Janszler
      @Janszler Před 7 lety +8

      Fun to know the french nicknames for this great car. I'm dutch, in holland we call them affectionally 'ugly ducklings'. Or just 'duck' :)

    • @lecanap7552
      @lecanap7552 Před 7 lety +2

      "pot de yaourt" and "boite de sardine" apply also to all kinds of little city cars, but the 2 C.V have it's own affectionate name : "deuchdeuch" or "deuch" if you're too lazy =) it's a contraction of "deux" and "chevaux" it sound like dutch but without the T !

    • @skytod4883
      @skytod4883 Před 7 lety +2

      Merci tu m'as appris des trucs sur la 2cv que je ne savais pas (jsuis français too)

    • @crashbox7130
      @crashbox7130 Před 6 lety +3

      The R4 was designed by Citroen engineers who had spent the 1950s developing a replacement for the 2CV, but the company was too cash-strapped to bring the ideas to market. Renault was state owned at the time and head-hunted the Citroen designers/engineers to leave Quai de Javal and move to Renault over in Billancourt. They used the knowledge learned at Citroen to develop Renault's first front-wheel-drive car. It became so successful that Renault never designed another RWD car.

  • @someonebald2022
    @someonebald2022 Před 7 lety +31

    The Renault 4 was designed with the same idea (low maintenance, economy, reliability) and has the same shifter, but an I4 water cooled OHV engine with the gearbox AT THE FRONT! They're also a lot of fun.

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz Před 6 lety +1

      The Dauphine was MY favorite, 845cc of pure excitement. Beautiful car and smooth riding.

    • @sammolloy1
      @sammolloy1 Před 4 lety

      The 4 was the best part of Romancing The Stone. They saw the R5 come and go.

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety +2

      And, peculiarly, different length wheelbases on each side, because of the odd suspension design...

  • @attila535
    @attila535 Před 4 lety +12

    Explaining the shifter on this car is like explaining King Crimson: It just works.

  • @bonenoble8528
    @bonenoble8528 Před 7 lety +110

    I fart in your general direction

    • @someonebald2022
      @someonebald2022 Před 7 lety +34

      "I wave my private parts at your auntie!"

    • @BigWheel.
      @BigWheel. Před 7 lety +7

      Herman Z elderberries yadda yadd hamster yadda yadda hon hon hon.

    • @Nooziterp1
      @Nooziterp1 Před 4 lety +3

      Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!

  • @2008tourer
    @2008tourer Před 7 lety +39

    Oh damn the owner of 2CV is so cute

  • @somethingtorelate
    @somethingtorelate Před 7 lety +54

    all im saying is trabant. drive a trabant Mr. Regular ;)

    • @TheOzthewiz
      @TheOzthewiz Před 6 lety +2

      Check with Doug DeMuro. He loved the Trabant... LOL

    • @foreignhour2388
      @foreignhour2388 Před 3 lety +3

      Aging Wheels needs to get with RCR, he could drive a Trabant, a 60s-era Saab 96, a Wheego... so many options

    • @earlystrings1
      @earlystrings1 Před 3 lety +1

      A Trabi! Ideally with the original two stroke. Would love that

  • @AutoAgitator
    @AutoAgitator Před 7 lety +23

    From 5:50 Mr Regular becomes the 'Have you ever had a dream' kid.

    • @SecretSauceyjuice
      @SecretSauceyjuice Před 7 lety

      AutoAgitator
      Or the:
      Has anyone really been far as decided to use even go want to do look more like?

  • @francinesicard464
    @francinesicard464 Před 2 lety +2

    My father, a civil engineer, worked in the 1950s and 1960s in East Africa on many construction sites. He had a Land Rover, a Jeep and a 2CV. When he had to solve urgently a problem on a bush site, no asphalt road thank you, but bush tracks full of potholes turning into mud river during the rainy season, and he did not need to carry heavy and enormous tools or heavy spare parts, he favoured his 2CV to spare his back. He used to say that he would get there faster with his 2CV, ... yes even with a 2CV.

  • @MrRandomcommentguy
    @MrRandomcommentguy Před 7 lety +11

    This car was responsible for possibly the greatest ever car chase in a James Bond film... RIP Roger Moore...

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety

      And something of an homage in "Castle of Cagliostro", which is rather Bond-like in tone throughout, and has both a 2CV and a Fiat 500 involved in a chase...

    • @JL-sm6cg
      @JL-sm6cg Před 2 lety

      "Take the low road!"
      (She flips the car)
      "Not THAT low!"

  • @ClickerQuiz
    @ClickerQuiz Před 7 lety +14

    "man the CV2 is neat. too bad There's never going to be a regular car review of one."
    Later that day RCR posted a "half review" of the CV2.

  • @AaronMk91
    @AaronMk91 Před 7 lety +49

    I want one.
    I want two.
    I want to mod the second to make it stealth as fuck on the roads.

    • @terrylill2363
      @terrylill2363 Před 7 lety +1

      Aaron MK bmw bike engine?

    • @AaronMk91
      @AaronMk91 Před 7 lety +1

      If it'll make it go faster like the Bond version, yup.
      Though at 9hp then I'm sure anything short of a pedal bike is better.

    • @miaugato93
      @miaugato93 Před 7 lety

      9hp was the MK1 2CV (1940's - 1970's)
      then then upped the power and displacement a bit over the years until
      the mk2 (1970's-1991) had at best a 602cc engine and 29hp.
      mk1 has a different grille and no C-pillar windows, the mk2 is the one featured.

    • @GODOFGUITAR2112
      @GODOFGUITAR2112 Před 6 lety

      Aaron MK Hyabusa engine?

  • @crashbox7130
    @crashbox7130 Před 6 lety

    I think this is probably the best review of the 2CV on CZcams. Bless you Mr.R. Quality as always.

  • @lovecarsTV
    @lovecarsTV Před 7 lety +58

    Ahhhhh, oui oui monsieur 👏🏼

  • @SlickTwigDotWAVfile
    @SlickTwigDotWAVfile Před 5 lety +9

    The roof of the 2cv of one of my mother’s teachers had flown of at the extreme speed of 80 kilometers per hour.

  • @Cheesemonk3h
    @Cheesemonk3h Před 7 lety +10

    the US answer to 'shrodinger's hipster' is a chrysler 300. plenty of people drive it unironically, but it is peak irony if you are driving it ironically

    • @catcat71gaming94
      @catcat71gaming94 Před 3 lety

      I love my 300

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 Před 3 lety

      Like a straight 300? Non letter car? What year? Is your comment a joke? Maybe it could use a rewrite. Or just make a copy of it. And throw it away.

  • @L00PdeL00P
    @L00PdeL00P Před 4 lety +9

    Wasn’t there a dude who got stranded in a desert and turned one of these into a bike to get back?

  • @KayakTN
    @KayakTN Před 7 lety +11

    I had an opportunity to sit in a 2CV... didn't get to drive it. The car almost tipped over when I sat inside. Super weird.

  • @phillipcox7946
    @phillipcox7946 Před 7 lety +10

    In the 1970s my cousin was a Marine Embassy Guard in the Netherlands. The were forbidden from owning two sorts of vehicles because they were too dangerous. One was any sort of motorcycle . The other was a 2CV.

  • @immatureradical
    @immatureradical Před 4 lety +4

    My father drove one of these into the ground 30 years ago and it became my joyriding vehicle in the tender age of 10, while he had left it parked and unsold and moved on to a little Peugeot. Not that it was possible to kill its engine, but after a couple of hundred thousand miles, it was hard to resist bolting on a 1,3 liter citroen gsa engine, making about 65 horses, and stiffening things up a bit. On such a thing I learnt driving on dirt roads, pretending to be a rally person. Hard to describe the mindfuck for people seeing a curiously fast 2CV driven by someone who looks like a teenager who's not supposed to drive, well, because he is one.
    It's also probably the only car in the world where lack of horsepower also turns out to be fun. You either drive like you don't have a care in the world, or you're going through every corner absolutely flat out because momentum is everything and it ends up feeling like a roller coaster, cause however scary the lean angles, it keeps gripping. It's pure fun, fun driving it alone, fun with friends, having pick nicks, having air blow to your face through the vent under the window, opening the top on traffic jams and pretending you're there for the sunlight, traveling in situations in which other cars would have fallen apart, having a full night's sleep in the back as a child, in a 20 hour journey... It defies all notions of how unhealthy loving cars too much might be. It makes it completely justified.

  • @Josh101
    @Josh101 Před 7 lety +2

    Where abouts in the UK did you do your filming?

  • @0631ix
    @0631ix Před 7 lety +45

    Speaking of cheap cars, is some Dacia gonna be reviewed?

  • @bartvanriel6767
    @bartvanriel6767 Před 7 lety +58

    1:29 your first pronunciation was best

    • @123marijn321
      @123marijn321 Před 7 lety +8

      Nope, it's more like "Sitrowhen" or "Sietrowhen"

    • @stevethepocket
      @stevethepocket Před 7 lety +2

      So it's literally pronounced exactly how it's spelled? What kind of French name is that?
      (Although I think the French technically leave the "n" silent so it's more like "Sit-ro-ehhhhh")

    • @123marijn321
      @123marijn321 Před 7 lety +1

      Pocket Fluff Productions true,the N is (almost) silent

    • @Janszler
      @Janszler Před 7 lety +2

      The N in Citroen is most definitely not silent - listen: fr.forvo.com/word/citro%C3%ABn/

    • @Eric__J
      @Eric__J Před 7 lety +1

      It actually is pronounced exactly how it's spelled. Pretty oddball, isn't it?

  • @benanderson89
    @benanderson89 Před 7 lety +30

    Needs more accordion and garlic.

  • @MrFunkyDutch
    @MrFunkyDutch Před 7 lety +2

    Awe yeah! Deux Chevaux!
    Much like the Beetle, the 2CV was used as a platform for other models like the Diane (slightly less utilitarian) and the Mehari (slightly more utilitarian).

    • @sammolloy1
      @sammolloy1 Před 4 lety

      Don’t forget the beautiful Ami-6

  • @minoassal
    @minoassal Před 4 lety +5

    My mechanical engineering teacher has one and he daily's it too, one time the clutch broke, he just changed gears without it once out of 1st

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety +1

      The early ones actually had a secondary centrifugal clutch which made this entirely possible - the foot pedal was just to make things smoother between gears, and to let you rev it up a bit harder before engaging drive for hill starts. Don't know if it was maintained into later models... probably died off around the same time fourth stopped being an "overdrive" you could only reach via third.
      Even so, that's not too uncommon a thing to be able to do in manual gearbox cars that lack silly American-style lockouts such as not allowing you to run the starter unless the box is in neutral and/or the clutch is pushed in (though if the switch is on the pedal rather than the transmission you might be able to cheat it) and/or you're pressing the brake. I've had some clutch cable and other related failures before ... as long as you can get it moving on the starter in 1st, or abuse the synchros sufficiently, give it a manual push-off, be careful with your approach to traffic lights etc so you can keep rolling uphill and use gravity to get going on downhills... etc... then you've covered the most troublesome part and can generally get away with clutchless shifts the rest of the time. You just generally have to run at somewhat higher revs (so the engine speed falls sufficiently to allow snicking in an upshift with reasonable rev-matching / well timed rhythmic stick movement), not upshift unless you really need to, and be very careful with downshifting, doing it pretty much straight away if you think there's going to be a need for it further up the road... and leave very long braking distances so you can creep along using the brake to hold an artificially low idle instead of stopping completely.
      Of course, a lighter car helps, as does an older one, as the transmission parts are likely to be a bit more robust and more heavily built, coming from an age where shaving off grammes wherever possible wasn't so much of a requirement, and small cars happened to be light just because they had smaller bodies, built with flimsier metal, and generally smaller engines with smaller clutches and fewer gears. You can abuse them more without causing damage, and particularly, for those with a 1st gear synchro, you can raise the revs a bit, push the lever against the balking synchro to get the car ever-so-slowly moving, then once it's up to walking pace release stick and throttle and shunt it into a rev-matched first once revs fall to idle. Obviously THAT one only really works on the flat, but the same characteristics make starter-bumping and clumsy attempts at inter-gear revmatching more effective too.

    • @crpth1
      @crpth1 Před 4 lety

      I can state with "experience on the subject" that a clutch was definitely a convenience but not necessarily an obligation. ;-)
      30 years VW Beetle, 18 years old guy, GF to visit... Well let's say a small detail, like not having a clutch, wouldn't stop me. LOL 😂
      Get into first gear, hit the starter get it going. Change gears ON TIME. I recall traffic lights had to be well negotiated, if not. Stop engine. Repeat first part, no problem.
      My car started perfectly which was a considerable help. But could make a bunch of runs pretty much wherever needed without a single gear grinding. In fact it's an amazing learning experience. I could negotiate any gearbox, even without synchro.

  • @wizardmix
    @wizardmix Před 7 lety +10

    YESSSS I was soooo hoping you'd do a classic Citroen!! You have to drive a DS at some point, we need your DS review as much as your pubes needed a double flush.

  • @jennydonne8946
    @jennydonne8946 Před 7 lety +20

    The tin snail 🐌🐌🐌🐌

  • @fordfarmer6465
    @fordfarmer6465 Před 3 lety

    Great review on the gear box, I love youse guys

  • @WalkableBuffalo
    @WalkableBuffalo Před 7 lety +2

    Can't say I've ever seen the Citroen 2CV on campus
    I'll be sure to give him a wave if I see him

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety

      You'll likely hear him coming first... those flat twins have a very distinctive engine note.

  • @ajorsomething4935
    @ajorsomething4935 Před 3 lety +3

    The trabant and the 2cv, both shift surprisingly and amazingly well due to how direct and uncomplicated the gear linkage is (though the transmission design also helps)

  • @nopochoclos
    @nopochoclos Před 6 lety +4

    I run my 3CV (Argentine version of 2cv6) in a voyage of 3000 km and the 2cv and 3cv has indestructibles engines! , great for drive!! nice comfort car, best heater ever!! direct from engine heat too. reach easy 100 km/h speed , enough for trips, the only problems is when you need to pass another vehicle, dont have reaction, that obligate you to lear fine driving skills, and the other problem is front and side winds, but the car is amazing pice of engineering!

  • @BarracksSi
    @BarracksSi Před 7 lety

    "Quantum superposition" is a perfect phrase that I don't think either Peter Egan or Paul Frere would have ever thought to use to describe the 2CV. Great vid. I think every U.S. car enthusiast has wondered what this car is like to drive.

  • @Dr_Nick_
    @Dr_Nick_ Před 7 lety +1

    Easier way to describe the shifter. Twist it left, get into R (forward) and 1 (back), turn it right a bit, it goes 2(forward) and 3(back), turn it right once more and you get 4.

  • @cra_55
    @cra_55 Před 7 lety +11

    Hope you guys get a chance to drive other Citroen gems like the DS, SM and C6

    • @someonebald2022
      @someonebald2022 Před 7 lety +2

      Ooooh, Citroen DS and SM..... *drools slightly*
      TOTAL style overload! Two cars so stylish Gok Wan would walk away in shame at his own unstylishness!

  • @nurofiend3555
    @nurofiend3555 Před 7 lety +198

    Citroen: when a soapbox racer was too luxurious
    I edited this because a certain group of people finished their daily fisting to the 5 different tvs all playing Herbie at different times, only to come on CZcams and argue why a car that I was making a lighthearted joke about, left a sour taste in their mouth, oh boy, I offended the vw bug club, don't get me wrong beetles are awesome, but I'm pretty sure the dudes getting mad at me for joking about beetles are the same people who put eyelashes and car bras on their cars

    • @JMNTN
      @JMNTN Před 7 lety +1

      The golf 1 wasn't a shit car at all

    • @Rentta
      @Rentta Před 7 lety +19

      Beetle was actually very smart design for it's time.

    • @Benedocta
      @Benedocta Před 7 lety +7

      The beetle isn't the same as a golf 1...
      Also, they're both not shit. The ones built in the US, yeah...

    • @olliewebbuk
      @olliewebbuk Před 7 lety +7

      Except it's basically better than the Beetle in every way. Beetles are dull.

    • @nurofiend3555
      @nurofiend3555 Před 7 lety +5

      Beetles in Australia are f u c k i n g t e r r i b l e, my nan had one in the 70s I think it was a 68 model?, it leaked it, it broke down all the time, basically it was a 2014 chevy cruze in 1971, that's where I'm coming from

  • @allwrathnograpes
    @allwrathnograpes Před 7 lety

    I love watching people racing these things. It's the silliest thing ever but it looks really fun

  • @JiForceful
    @JiForceful Před 7 lety

    0:17 mr regular knows evermore, i freakin love you so much!
    - your viewer from straya

  • @jamesbensch6
    @jamesbensch6 Před 7 lety +3

    for a short time in the 60s they sold them here in Canada alongside their high end models. you sometimes see restored 2CVs on the road

  • @sDreptar
    @sDreptar Před 7 lety +10

    ok jay leno calm down

  • @MatthewSmith193
    @MatthewSmith193 Před 5 lety

    You know the video is going to be good when the intro makes you "What the fresh hell" out loud.

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage Před 7 lety +2

    For his entire almost 3 minute long description of how the shifter works, I sat there enthralled with my lips wrapped around my teeth, wishing I could try it. So cool!

  • @TheGel69
    @TheGel69 Před 7 lety +3

    not all 2cv are soft top, the 2cv camionette or truckette is tin. really cool unit you ve got here and a rare RHD congrat

  • @alastairward2774
    @alastairward2774 Před 7 lety +4

    Alfie Munkenbeck, sounds just like a 2CV driver should be named.

  • @claudiopadilla9947
    @claudiopadilla9947 Před 7 lety

    nice to have you back boys, all is well one again.

  • @footieballer
    @footieballer Před 6 lety

    Stellar review. Love, love, love this car.

  • @yungtityboi7719
    @yungtityboi7719 Před 7 lety +99

    NOT AMERICAN

    • @TheROWAISHED
      @TheROWAISHED Před 7 lety +3

      Yung Tityboi *high quality

    • @johanstevens5824
      @johanstevens5824 Před 7 lety +3

      Desert Fearce it's French so ----> low quality

    • @SwingAxleLover
      @SwingAxleLover Před 7 lety +1

      Jean-Louis Stevens To be honest id rather have a French car that breaks down on me all the time than an American car that runs like clockwork. I almost bought a 1985 Peugeot 505 wagon for $25 once!

    • @johanstevens5824
      @johanstevens5824 Před 7 lety +1

      Michael Yachnis I myself would rather have a German, Japanese or American car because I don't like French cars. I mean there's a reason why the Renault logo looks like a jack stand

    • @SwingAxleLover
      @SwingAxleLover Před 7 lety

      Jean-Louis Stevens Oh believe mw i know its stupid. we just dont have any french cars

  • @sushi777300
    @sushi777300 Před 6 lety +3

    It's THE most charming car ever
    I see it and I smile 😁😊

  • @swsephy
    @swsephy Před 7 lety

    Always loved these. There's a mint one here and it's amazing.

  • @jaco5187
    @jaco5187 Před 4 lety

    Growing up in Germany in the early 80's, my parents had several of these cars. Loved them!

  • @scotty686
    @scotty686 Před 7 lety +163

    >Mr Regular discussing European cars rather than the usual American junk
    >Same genius
    >More class
    Hnnnnnng

    • @froggodoggo79
      @froggodoggo79 Před 7 lety +54

      SEEEEEWWW FAWNCEHH

    • @3DSuperWaffle
      @3DSuperWaffle Před 7 lety +9

      >junk
      Um

    • @johnteckel9629
      @johnteckel9629 Před 7 lety +1

      Enjoy ! group.renault.com/groupe/implantations/nos-representations-commerciales/

    • @johnteckel9629
      @johnteckel9629 Před 7 lety

      btw Nissan and Opel are also french owned

    • @johnteckel9629
      @johnteckel9629 Před 7 lety +1

      a bit more ? www.groupe-psa.com/fr/groupe-automobile/presence-internationale/

  • @624radicalham
    @624radicalham Před 7 lety +16

    Way too many opening still shots of the owner of the car makes you wonder if there was a crush going on between Regular and that guy. And plenty of hand touchy touchy at 3:19 doesn't help. Or, most likely, I'm just full of shit.

  • @justmechanicthings
    @justmechanicthings Před 6 lety +1

    The driver fits this car like a glove

  • @sonofedmund5004
    @sonofedmund5004 Před 5 lety

    I had one, loved it. Gear change was awesome. You're right it was like a golf cart! Wish I kept it they go for £8000 now! Duelling with trucks in the slow lane brings back memories!

  • @XBlockAcah
    @XBlockAcah Před 7 lety +16

    1983 car with vintage design... pretty weird.

    • @someonebald2022
      @someonebald2022 Před 7 lety +28

      Designed before WWII, which may explain it. The early ones only had one headlamp!

    • @MrStabby19812
      @MrStabby19812 Před 7 lety +11

      Liam Godden the prototypes were hidden from the Germans they still turn up now and again hidden in roofs etc someone found one a couple of years ago. Remember the humble beetle was in production for longer. Almost every country has a car that simply crosses the generations.

    • @nickrustyson8124
      @nickrustyson8124 Před 6 lety +1

      Also pretty lazy

    • @JohnSmith-wx9wj
      @JohnSmith-wx9wj Před 6 lety +1

      How long was it before you could drink the tap water in France?

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety

      Never mind 1983, they were still selling these well into the 90s. They remained popular for their simplicity, robustness, cheap purchase and running costs, and timeless charming style... what killed them off was emissions regs - the engine was essentially unchanged since the 40s but for a bore/stroke job and a few evolutionary refinements, so was an exhaust composition disasterzone (I think it even still demanded leaded or lead-replacement fuel right to the end), and Citroen didn't fancy putting any investment into cleaning it up whatsoever. More profitable to just encourage people to transition to their newer AX/BX and Saxo/Xsara models. (The AX being somewhat of a spiritual successor, as it was also small, cheap, basic, interestingly styled, and very very French; so French that I had to reject one as my own first car because my British feet couldn't fit on the brake pedal thanks to a hackish RHD conversion)

  • @Catboy.
    @Catboy. Před 7 lety +6

    Didn't Richard dryfuss dive one of those in American graffiti

    • @Larkaldi
      @Larkaldi Před 7 lety +1

      The California Garage
      yes

  • @artvandelayimports
    @artvandelayimports Před 7 lety

    Oh yes I've been waiting for another RCR Review

  • @k0r31fett
    @k0r31fett Před 7 lety

    Oh yes, have been waiting so long for this car

  • @jessesanders922
    @jessesanders922 Před 7 lety +3

    You should do more videos when jet lagged. You are funny.

  • @raydon1005
    @raydon1005 Před 7 lety +5

    after watching this is want one, the speed limit is 40mph here amyway

  • @KayakTN
    @KayakTN Před 7 lety +1

    My introduction to the 2CV was watching Shirley Maclaine drive one like a maniac in some awful, forgotten Sunday afternoon movie on TV in the 1980s.

  • @osvaldovidela6466
    @osvaldovidela6466 Před 4 lety +1

    The 2CV wasn't the only french car to have that kind of shifter the Renault 4 and 6 had it but because the engine is mounted backwards Engine is near the firewall and the transmission is on the front of the engine

  • @ScottaHemi440
    @ScottaHemi440 Před 7 lety +3

    I saw one of these in Alaska. i have no idea why it was up there, i'd imagine every hill and mountain would probably give it's engine a conniption.

    •  Před 6 lety +1

      It can go uphill.. slowly, but it can ! XD

  • @aarondinsmore7176
    @aarondinsmore7176 Před 7 lety +4

    Always had a bit of crush on the 2CV. Guy at the local golf course has one. Sometimes you don't need to go fast. Just go.

    • @crashbox7130
      @crashbox7130 Před 6 lety +1

      Speed Kills. Buy a 2CV. Live forever.

    • @user-ek1dd4zb1s
      @user-ek1dd4zb1s Před 6 lety

      well said

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety

      If you can get up to about 35-45mph you're already going about 16x faster than someone walking and 4x faster than a typical cyclist (a regular person on an old style safety bike anyway; 2 to 3x faster than a fit rider on a modern bike), and twice as fast as a horse being pushed moderately hard, which is a considerable improvement over anything the common man could manage before, and a good rival for most everyday affordable motorcycles before Honda came along and demonstrated that you could get good power from a small engine by pumping up the revs (and even then, their C50s and C90s, the world's most popular bikes of all time, occupied a similar speed range).
      It's probably why a lot of the most iconic early mass-motorisation cars offered about that much speed. You can do a lot with it, that you couldn't do with any previous mode of transport, and even vs motorcycles (optionally with sidecars) you could carry more people and stuff, in better comfort and safety and with better weather protection. Legally speaking at least, most of motoring history in most countries of the world you've never really been able to go much faster than about twice that speed, and even then you need a good quality, preferably expressway or freeway standard road to sustain it instead of being frequently busted back down to 50 or quite a lot less. So your potential improvement _from_ that point, even ignoring how affordable cars didn't start getting engines and aerodynamics (and fuel economy) that allowed you to (mostly-)illegally go faster still until relatively recently, is only about twofold. Compared to the improved average speed the basic model already offers, it's fairly small beer.
      And, well, if you haven't got somewhere to be in a hurry, and you're not going to get in anyone's way (at least, not that you can't safely and promptly get out of the way of), it's a rather pleasant and relaxing speed to travel at. Very economical as well.

  • @ccc369
    @ccc369 Před 6 lety +2

    Another typical engine swap was a bmw r/100 engine with 70-80hp.

  • @Aldairion
    @Aldairion Před 4 lety

    I got to drive one of these at Amelia Island! The gearbox is, in fact, excellent. I actually have this video to thank for showing me how the shirt pattern works - it really put the gentleman from Hagerty at ease.

  • @Katsina1
    @Katsina1 Před 7 lety +3

    its soo French.
    and the owner.. super cute

  • @jamesferro433
    @jamesferro433 Před 7 lety +23

    Rcr uploaded. I guess exam study can wait

  • @JacksonJacoy
    @JacksonJacoy Před 6 lety

    This review was great!

  • @ressljs
    @ressljs Před 2 lety

    It's nice to see reviews of cars most people would consider "crappy" where they're talked about in context of when and where they were made and given a fair shake. A lot of CZcams really tries to roast everything, point and laugh, "OMG, it sucks!" And it just gets tiring.

  • @sexyjesu
    @sexyjesu Před 7 lety +5

    Still waiting for the supra review

  • @dapeach06
    @dapeach06 Před 6 lety +4

    Don't feel pressured to pronounce French cars the way they do in the UK, because they practically intentionally mangle French pronunciation. Peugeot isn't supposed to be pronounced "PeRgot", but because English doesn't do a lot of "eu" sounds, and Jeremy Clarkson will go out of his way to mispronounce foreign words, the British have inserted an "R" sound where there is none, and even though the common American pronunciation of "Poo-got" isn't 100% right either, it's closer. And in Citroen, the emphasis in French is on the last syllable, and it technically has 3 syllables, but in the UK they pronounce it like "Citron", with 2. I LOVE the UK, but just because they pronounce a word one way, doesn't mean it's right.

    • @markpenrice6253
      @markpenrice6253 Před 4 lety

      I don't know anyone who says "PeRgot". As far as I knew, it was "Perzjoh", and if that's still not right then it can't be too far from the truth as it matches with the sounds I was taught in French lessons at school. Similarly "Ceetroen" (whatever difference the accent makes is pretty subtle, and certainly isn't clear when said in an allegedly actual French accent), and "Renno", rather than "Citron"/"Citrown" or "Renolt".
      The manufacturer's TV adverts drill the correct pronunciation into us quite well. Don't take Top Gear's deliberate silliness as your gospel; if Clarkson is mispronouncing something to get a laugh, _he's mispronouncing something to get a laugh,_ and his domestic audience derive some of the comedy from _knowing_ he's saying it wrong.

    • @JL-sm6cg
      @JL-sm6cg Před 2 lety

      I said "pewjit" at first until I heard the commercial for a local car dealer who sold them and they said "poo-zhoh", and I'm like, "Ohhhhh."

  • @Kalandaari
    @Kalandaari Před 7 lety

    I have a Citroën Méhari, which is a 2CV with a plastic boxy body. These things are the fastest things you can drive on a dirt road, and it's so much fun to drive !

  • @nagaraworkshop
    @nagaraworkshop Před 6 lety

    I think they're wonderful cars. Over the years I've driven a few and had a couple of regular customers who had them. Though lacking power you can rev them and drive them flat out all day. They will cruise at 70mph with no problems but steep hills kill your speed so 'momentum' driving and snappy downshifts are crucial. I also like the Renault 4 - we had a couple in the family and they weigh a tad more but have punchy little 4 cylinder engines - magnificent!

  • @tylercameron757
    @tylercameron757 Před 6 lety +4

    Bro... I'm stoned af and that explanation of the transmission has me questioning my existence.

  • @hairman943
    @hairman943 Před 7 lety +5

    for the next season can you guys do a thing about British Leyland

    • @snoballuk
      @snoballuk Před 7 lety

      I was hoping that somehow they'd get to drive a BL Princess but those cars are probably all scrap by now.

    • @MrStabby19812
      @MrStabby19812 Před 7 lety

      snoballuk pretty much any uk car from the 70s&80s rusted like crazy.

  • @Alystas
    @Alystas Před 7 lety

    "There is always a Fuel Shortage" never before this quote of you has been so true

  • @adamlytle2615
    @adamlytle2615 Před 3 lety

    When you look at most cars being produced in the early 80s, it's pretty great that there was still this and the Beetle