Posted on 11/21/2016 5:31:27 PM PST by MtnClimber
If Citroen had built that, they would have sold a million of them in this country.
Americans in general don’t appreciate French cars, no matter how pretty. They’re too idiosyncratic, not “normal” in the way Americans expect cars to be. They’re French, therefore they’re a little odd, or even flat out weird. Me, I’ve always loved cars, especially the ones that push the envelope. My favorite Chevy is the 2nd generation Corvair. I own a Subaru AWD GT turbo wagon. So, Citroen is cool with me, way cool, too bad they pulled out of the US market in the seventies. I’d love to see them return, if they had a decent service network and parts availability.
That’s not bad looking. I don’t think the one I posted is actually a “real” car, more like a rolling concept.
They built a few Citroen GT’s, and had planned to go into production with as many as 20 per year, but the financial crash did it in, I think. It never went into official production and sale.
I never thought I’d want a French car...
The best of them resolve engineering and ergonomic challenges in very surprising ways, but work quite well once you get over the shock. Their aesthetics are often an acquired taste. Most Americans would remember Renault, which is more mainstream. Peugeot was a little more different but still well within what Americans understand “car” to be. Then you have Citroen. Top of the heap but they can be... unusual.
My first car was a 1963 Chevy Corvair. I lusted after the '66 and '67 Monzas.
Noone seems to know how many are in the USA; Ralph Lauren, Jay Leno, etc
Not a problem.
My 65 Willys had vacuum wipers and the frame is rusted bad enough to justify scrapping it.
I’m getting a 68-75 era frame that supports the electric motor.
Sorry for the confusion.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.