Who likes uplifting stories of rebirth and second chances that don’t involve supernatural elements or thinly-veiled religious overtones? You do! I mean, I hope you do, because I’m about to deliver such a story to you, about a funny little French car that I’m smitten with that was left for dead back in 2014 and, as of yesterday, returned to the roads, under its own power – if I can use that word for a 29-horsepower engine – for the first time in over a decade. It feels miraculous, but it’s no miracle. It’s the combination of a lot of work from a number of people and a little machine that someone at that factory in the Northwest part of Paris forgot to teach the meaning of the word quitter.
Yes, I’m talking about the Citroën 2CV that our Stephen Walter Gossin found in a field in Garland, NC, in a really sad state of neglect and disrepair. The car had once been the pride and joy of an owner named Willie, but a number of circumstances, including that jerk age, caused him to have to park the car on his property back in 2014, and there it sat.
Rust isn’t as huge an issue out here in North Carolina as in many places, but the Earth still longs to reclaim everything, and here that comes in the form of wet, rot, mold, mummification via pine needles, and more. Oh, and it was also shot up, the bullet kind of shot up, as it sat there, defenseless. It wasn’t in great shape.

It was pretty sad. But SWG did a ton of work on it, replacing (among many things) the top and the shot-out windows and generally getting it to a point where it looked like resurrection would at least be possible. Then he sold it to me, letting me realize a lifelong dream to own one of these charming weirdos.
It wasn’t running at all when I got it, and there were plenty of things to sort out before it got there, not the least of which was the wiring, which looked sort of like the results of a dog vomiting about three pounds of spaghetti. So I’ve been hacking away at all these issues, and making some progress here and there, and even got it running – but just like for a minute or so at a time.
I just couldn’t get it to idle long enough to actually drive, and that was driving me nuts. I took off the carb and cleaned it – not a full disassembly clean, but an off-car full dunk into carb cleaner, but that didn’t really help. I was getting frustrated, and the weather was crappy, limiting the days I could be out there to work with it, all of which led me to an important decision:
Get some help.

I needed to trade some money for time and skill, two commodities that are sadly rare in my life. I’m desperately trying to not repeat big mistakes I’ve made before, in this case a mistake I made with my ’73 Beetle, where I took the carbs off to clean them but then got distracted by other crap (including co-founding this very website) and let the car sit carb-less in the elements too long, leading to the engine getting siezed up. Ugh. Never again.
So, I found the only shop in town that still actually rebuilt carbs, a place called Garcia Auto Repair, and Mr.Juan Garcia actually had some experience with 2CVs, decades ago. So I towed the whole 2CV out to him, so he could tune the carb on the engine after rebuilding.
I’m so glad I did this, because he figured out why I could never get it to idle for any length of time: the carb was broken on the inside:

It looked like the bits that held/hinged the float in place were broken. Luckily, Willie’s 2CV came with boxes of parts, and one of those parts was another carb! Which worked!

Juan got that other carb cleaned and rebuilt, plopped it onto the engine, and holy crap, that thing ran. He sounded thrilled himself as he told me how great it was running, and it was pretty clear that he was having a good time with this thing. There were still other issues – the fuel tank, which SWG had dropped and cleaned out, was having an issue with the sealing of the fuel gauge sender which was causing air to be pulled into the fuel line, which wasn’t good.
Also, the fuel line from the tank wasn’t great, so that rubber line was replaced with a long snazzy copper line, too. Still, those are solvable problems, and I was so excited to get this thing back and drive it and work on it, so we rigged up a five-gallon fuel can in the passenger footwell to drive on. Really, it’s only like a gallon and a half smaller than the actual tank in the car!

But it runs and drives now. Which means I was able to drive it back from Juan’s shop, a distance of about 10 miles and on a state highway, where I hit speeds of a dizzying 100 kph! That’s 62 mph! Over a mile-a-minute! On a car that had been sitting in a field for about 12 years (the lifespan of some grudges, I’m told) and without front fenders and with a gas can on the floor and a license plate I found in an Argentinian junkyard!

That’s riding pretty dirty. But I don’t care, at least not at this moment.

But look up there! The brake lights even work!

Speaking of brakes, the brake warning light came on, too, and the brakes do feel a bit mushy, so I think I need to find some of that LHM brake fluid to top it off. Normal brake fluid in these cars would be a disaster.

Oh, also, I think my alternator isn’t alternating; it was only reading about 11.1V at best, and dropped to 10.4V at times. This car doesn’t exactly have a lot of electrical demand, but I’d like to be able to at least be over 12V.
There’s still plenty to do, clean up, get in order, sorted, fluids changed, and so on. But now that it’s driving, it’s a totally different game. There’s a huge difference in sorting out a driving car than one that sits, immobile and forlorn.
Here’s a little video of me being delighted and driving the 2CV around:
I’m so excited. This toute petite voiture is back from the dead; it could have just decayed into nothing in that field, but fate had other plans. Much more fun plans, and I’m just excited to be a part of them.









Awww this warms my heart
In addition to the fix list, don’t forget to get a baguette (or prop) to leave oh so casually propped against the dash. I don’t advocate smoking, but a tattered pack of Gauloises on the dash would complete the look.
So lovely, that 2CV. 🙂
You’ll be hauling baskets of eggs over the field in no time!
Suuuuuccchhhhh a cool car. No better feeling than when they cough back to life. Honestly, it looks and sounds great for a car pulled out of a field after a decade of neglect. You’re a lucky man, Torch.
Awesome! Congratulations…it looks like your Fuel Shark is working perfectly. I absolutely love my Fuel Shark, it is the best thing I’ve ever bought for my car. I can’t believe how much gas I save! Ha ha
Yay! \(^o^)/
Did you make sure to give that cable tie a good tug and say “That’s not going anywhere”?
I read “LMH brake fluid” as “LVMH (Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessey) brake fluid.” Sort of suprising to me that I knew that acronym in the first place that but the idea of using cognac for brake fluid in a Citroen feels both very right and very wrong. Sacre bleu! And congrats on achieving self-propulsion!
Hooray!!!!
Congrats! There’s nothing quite like motoring down the road in a vehicle whose highest technology – and power output – comes to approximately par with a 1980s Briggs and Stratton.
Don’t let anybody give you grief for the fuel tank. Been there, done that – although mine was a little one-gallon jug that I was able to shove under the hood.
Actually, there’s a tremendous amount of space under the hood of the little Duck. You could shove a jug in there somewhere and be good to go.
Ah the Roadkill gas tank solution. You’re definitely following the dont get it right, just get it running mantra.
i trust willie has been informed!
First chainsawing lead-acid batteries, now driving down the highway with the fuel tank inside the passenger compartment…
Torch, l love man, but it’s seriously time for an intervention.
You have never watched vice grip garage! I think it gives Torch cred.
Reminds me that we once cut the back half off a Ford Fiesta (right behind the front seats) and drove the front half around the neighborhood with a similarly rigged gas can. At least Torch wasn’t shooting sparks out the back like we were…
Congratulations! I probably wouldn’t have used a rag to plug the neck of the field-expedient fuel tank but at least you’ve got the tank itself half-heartedly and haphazardly zip-tied in place so it’s all good.
Yeah, that’s not a Molotov Cocktail, that’s a Molotov Borg.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borg_(drink) )
It did occur to me that the technical term for that rag is “wick.”
Awesome news! Celebrate with a lunch of shrimp and brie.
Escargot was right there, probably in his garden!
That too
The world may be turning to shit, but we got some good news today! Really happy for you, Jason!
Awesome news, Jason. Having just gotten my new-to-me project Scout 800 running this weekend after being abandoned in a field for 15+ years, I can totally relate to the feeling of excitement. Your 2CV is further along than mine—you have brakes and lights, and stuff that allows you to drive it legally in Argentina, while I have a running engine, a transmission that shifts, and not much else—but I’ll be looking for more updates on your French tractor!
Congratulations!!! 2CVs are huge fun and surprisingly practical. In mine, acceleration and cruising speed with just me in it is enough for most roads short of full interstate highways. But its SLOW when I’ve had 4 adults onboard, even for neighborhood drives. I’m working on some changes to get more power out of mine.
The Argentinian license plate is a great touch!
What is that button below the brake warning light?
Brake warning light test switch
That’s awesome.
OMFG. The line about the Argentinian junkyard plate had me laughing maniacally.
No guff about taking it in. Sometimes you just need to move the project along and the solution will not come to you. I spent 3 months with a non idling 72 super beetle due to a failed fuel shutoff solenoid. Failed closed, which both makes sense and also wasn’t obvious at all. Could have had it on the road in a week if I’d bothered my mechanic about it. Lost 3 months of sanity about how I could not get one of the simplest vehicles back on the road.
What a happy little snail. It went to the right person.
Cool little ride but as I get older I realize that the old cars, many that I’ve driven in my lifetime are nothing but death traps.
In an accident there’s little to no protection from severe injury or worse.Enjoy the ride and stay safe.
My mentor told me “drive your 2CV the way you ride a bike in traffic. The safety equipment is between your ears”
Until someone comes screaming through an intersection on their mobile phone and t-bones you. The sad thing is that what’s between your easrs isn’t going to help.
Still safer than a motorcycle.
Well that’s certainly true.
Such a happy vehicle 🙂
When it is all finished will there be a video of a basket of eggs that remain unbroken when driving across a plowed field?
I’m so old that I was 25 before the Internet became A Thing. When I was young, I “probably” did a lot of illegal stuff. And if I did, I kept the information within a tight group of close friends.
So it still weirds me out, even today, when people put direct legal evidence of flouting the law onto the Internet, for everyone (presumably including law enforcement personnel) to see.
Now I’m well aware that driving an unregistered (and possibly uninsured?) vehicle on public roadways isn’t a heinous or violent crime and it’s probably not even a felony in most places, but I fail to understand why our Mr. Torchinsky would post admissible evidence of having committed a crime on a publicly-accessible website.
Help this old guy make sense of it.
This is North Carolina. Registration enforcement is practically non-existent these days. If the law isn’t hassling all the 90 mph Altimas with long expired paper temp tags,Torch will probably be OK.
Besides, the 2CV is more than 35 years old, which means in NC it’s not even required to have a valid license plate affixed to the vehicle. Our “year of manufacture” plate law says he can run any plate from the year the car was made. He’s supposed to have a valid plate in the car, but no one’s likely to pull him over to check.
How did i not know this?!?
Right now my 1988 200SX has a NC Senate plate that belonged to the state senator from District 20A (Chapel Hill) in 1988. I like it because 1988 is stamped into the metal rather than just a sticker.
My 1990 Ram 50 has a replica of the old 80s California “sunset” plate that says STAYRAD, with 1990 CA registration stickers I got off eBay.
G.S. 20-63 (d) :
“Any motor vehicle of the age of 35 years or more from the date of manufacture may bear the license plates of the year of manufacture instead of the current registration plates, if the current registration plates are maintained within the vehicle and produced upon the request of any person.”
I keep this printed out in my old cars to be safe.
That’s an interesting law.
State laws are so wildly different from one place to the next!
With a little more work I’d bet you could drive longer on two wheels than that silly old Simca!
Way cool. Time to make it ready for some new adventures.