Home » My Old Citroën 2CV That Spent Over A Decade Abandoned In A Yard Successfully Finished Its First Big Post-Resurrection Trip!

My Old Citroën 2CV That Spent Over A Decade Abandoned In A Yard Successfully Finished Its First Big Post-Resurrection Trip!

Cs 2cv Lemons26 Top

I’m writing this now from the relative comfort of my own home, safely strapped into my work-pod, nutrient and waste tubes properly affixed, and the reason that is happening instead of me furtively texting this from the shoulder of some forgotten rural Carolina road is because the little ramshackle French car I’ve been tinkering on for months has officially proven itself. My Citroën 2CV successfully made the trip from Chapel Hill, NC to the Carolina Motorsports Park in Kershaw, SC, and back.

I call that a victory.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

I’m not saying there weren’t some issues, because of course there were, but nothing that actually stopped me. The car feels like it wants to drive, it feels willing and eager and alive. Yes, it’s loud as hell, and I need to work on the driver’s seat a bit more because it made my butt hurt (literally, not the internet way), but it met the goal I set out for it when I started to try and get it running all those months ago. This was the milestone voyage, and I’m thrilled to say it made it.

Img 0604 Large

Starting out, I had the roof rolled back, and the weather was perfect, and the whole experience in this car was delightful, just textbook, happy cliché delightful. It’s quirky and noisy and happy, and everyone who sees it smiles and either knows what it is and wants to tell you every experience they had with a 2CV, or they’re curious and ask questions. Or, they mistakenly think it’s a Volkswagen. All those responses are fine, because everyone who comes up to peer at it seems like their day has been improved, even ever so slightly, by the encounter.

Img 0605 Large

One of the issues I still need to address is the lack of a working fuel gauge; I brought a five-gallon gas can with me, which is almost the size of the 6.6-gallon built-in tank, so that at least keeps me from getting stuck anywhere. As it was, I ran out of gas one time, but it was right, and I do mean right, as I rolled into the parking lot where all the Lemons officials were parking for the big street festival/car inspection that we do in the town of Camden, SC, before each race at the track there. So I got pretty lucky!

Img 0611 Large

As far as the actual experience of driving goes, I’m really pretty thrilled. I think my idle is still too fast by a bit, and if I lower it too much it will stall, but when it’s actually driving, that plucky flat-twin is more than happy to run and rev, and, on slight downhill grades, I even managed to get it up to a sustained speed of around 65-68 mph (110 kph) or so! Look up there, there’s proof, at least if we believe that tiny speedometer, which I think I do, based on tests with those speed limit signs that display your speed in flashing numbers.

Img 0703 Large

I should probably mention the noise level when driving, because it is, as they say, non-trivial. I’m used to air-cooled clatter from my many years of Beetle-driving, but in a Beetle, that air-cooled engine is behind you, happily blaring its cacophony out the back of the car. In the 2CV, it’s in front of you, just past your feet, and it’s more than happy to make its presence known.

My sound insulation under the hood is in pretty poor shape, which is likely part of the issue, and looks a bit like the fur of a murdered Muppet just after being exhumed from a shallow grave. You can see some of it here, as I was taking a picture of the fuse that kept popping:

Img 0709 Large

That was one of the other issues: for some reason, this fuse would seemingly randomly blow, which was a pain, because that’s the one that controls a lot of ancillary functions like turn indicators and windshield wipers – which was a very annoying issue one rainy morning on the way to the track as they quit partway – and, perhaps most significantly, also affected whether or not the alternator would charge.

I “solved” this by buying more fuses on the trip back, but I need to see what is grounding out or whatever. I suspect it’s one of the turn signal wires from the fenders, but I’m not sure yet.

Oh, but back to the noise; with the windows open, the under-windshield vent flap open, and the engine at full tilt, it’s a whole symphony of white noise. It made listening to the Bluetooth speaker in my dash shelf difficult, so I put in some noise-cancelling earbuds, which definitely helped, but then when those cut off, the full audio reality would return, and you’d think the world was exploding, only to remember, no, that’s just normal.

I bet I can mitigate the noise a bit, and around town it’s fine, but I suppose worth pointing out so you get the idea of the full experience.

Oh, here’s an odd issue I noticed the morning when I drove from the hotel to the track: my alternator wasn’t alternating for the whole ride over, and this was before the fuse started popping, so I looked at it when I parked at the track. I don’t really understand how, but the bolt that holds the fan and alternator pulley to the crankshaft pulley somehow worked itself loose.

Img 0680 Large

That means I drove about a half hour with not just no alternator, but no fan! Luckily, it was cool, and I was in motion essentially the whole time, so there was plenty of airflow. Still, I need to keep an eye on this so that doesn’t happen again.

Img 0712 Large

I think I probably need new shocks, as there isn’t so much dampening going on, at least outside of my pants. On road, it’s pretty much fine, but on rougher terrain, it can get a little bouncy, even with the soft suspension these are known for. The only real repercussion of this was that one bounce popped off the little clip that holds the window open, so I’ll have to find a good way to re-affix that.

Img 0721 Large

That did allow me to use the alternate window-opening method I had yet to try, this little wire doohickey that holds the window partially open for airflow without flipping it up entirely. That means these windows have an incredible three openness settings!

I did lose my Autopian Member grille badge somewhere along the way, too. Look, here it is at the beginning of the trip, down on the lower center area of the grille:

Img 0607 Large

…and here it isn’t near the end:

Img 0725 Large

Maybe someone will find it. If so, enjoy, and consider becoming an actual Autopian member!

Img 0688 Large

Some other minor things I noticed: if you look above, you’ll see some water dripping down the instrument cluster. In heavy rain, there seems to be a leak from the vent flap that helpfully keeps my buttons clean there, so that’s handy. Besides, I hear electrical things love water!

Img 0722 Large

Oh, and during the trip, the odometer hit 98,000 kilometers! That’s about 60,900 miles! I wonder if it’s already rolled over before? Who knows?

Cs 2cv Trunklatch

Oh, and I need to fix my trunk latch/lock/handle. It works itself open and then the trunk lid flaps open when you pull away from a stop, which I bet looks funny. Thankfully, nothing fell out!

Img 0689 Large

I know I keep saying it, but I can’t believe this is the same car that was mouldering in that field not so long ago. I can’t believe I actually own a 2CV! I can’t believe how well it’s actually driving! What I can easily believe is how much I love driving this thing, how happy it makes me feel to loudly rattle around in this two-tone tin baguette.

Sure, it still needs some refinement and tweaking and dialing in, but it works, it runs, it drives, it gets me from place to place, it does what it was designed to do, and it seems as thrilled as I am to be doing it.

This’ll be the first of many happily loud road trips in the 2CV. I can’t wait.

Oh, and I’ll have a post about all the stuff at the race later today!

All photos: Jason Torchinsky 

 

 

 

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
84 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Hugh Crawford
Member
Hugh Crawford
3 days ago

“ think I probably need new shocks, as there isn’t so much dampening going on”
What year 2CV is this?
The original design doesn’t have shock absorbers, but has tuned mass dampers (illegal in F1, so they must be good!)
In 1965 the rear tuned mass dampers “frotteurs” were replaced by hydraulic telescopic shocks, and in 1975 the front tuned mass dampers and front friction dampers were replaced by shocks,
I would want to get a pre 65 with the original suspension without the shocks.
The fact that frotteurs means something entirely different in English only makes it more fun,

Harveydersehen
Member
Harveydersehen
5 days ago

Is that bungee cord holding the bumper or the hood in place? Or maybe both?

2CVs are loud, especially with the window and/or top open, but your description does suggest it’s louder than it should be.

Mouse
Member
Mouse
5 days ago

The under hood insulation looks like you ran over a highland cow and hid the evidence in there.

Sundance
Sundance
6 days ago

“…little wire doohickey that holds the window partially open…” In my 2CV the device which holds the window in the upright position was worn out and after several painful slams on my elbow (by the falling window) I only used the wire doohickey.

Harveydersehen
Member
Harveydersehen
5 days ago
Reply to  Sundance

IIRC some models had a magnet that held the flappy window up.

Sundance
Sundance
5 days ago
Reply to  Harveydersehen

My 2CV was a ’72 2CV4 (smallblock) and it had a kind of clamp mounted at the top of the door. There was a pin on the lower window frame which, when you folded the window up, was supposed to be held in the clamp – or not 🙂

Idiotking
Member
Idiotking
6 days ago

As a fellow owner of an ancient, clattery vehicle (well, two of them) I suggest keeping a bag of disposable earplugs in the glove box. I believe my tinnitus is directly related to driving long distance in the noisy beasts for 30+ years (or that Dinosaur Jr. show I saw in 1998), but as we get older we gotta take care of ourselves.

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
6 days ago

I had a horrible feeling that you would let some fool talk you into racing this car. I’m not above writing a strongly worded letter to the editor. You own the most interesting car in Autopia.

William Domer
Member
William Domer
6 days ago

Bravo Monsieur Torchinsky,

Now restore it to its’ desired (hoped for) beauty, inside and out. You remind us all of what an engine and 4 wheels were created for: getting from one place to the other in relative comfort and arriving not wet, tired and dirty. All the rest is either gravy, art, speed or an over abundance of tchotchkes.

Nick Fortes
Member
Nick Fortes
6 days ago

How do you guesstimate the gas mileage? Or do you just let it run out on it own and use the can to refill, then immediately go to a gas station to refill the can again?

Redapple
Redapple
6 days ago

1″ x 1″ piece of foil fixes the fuse problem.

Ben
Member
Ben
6 days ago

I think I probably need new shocks, as there isn’t so much dampening going on, at least outside of my pants.

I’d be more concerned if your shocks are dampening anything. The fluid is supposed to stay on the inside, after all. 😉

PlatinumZJ
Member
PlatinumZJ
6 days ago

Awesome! Glad you and the 2CV had a successful road trip.

I nearly had the same thing happen with my badge; one of the little threaded studs separated from the back when I tried to install it.

Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
6 days ago

Was there an article explaining the story behind the Argentinian license plate? I seem to recall some allusion to that being North-Carolina legal in this situation, and I’d be really interested to hear about how that works

Mike Harrell
Member
Mike Harrell
6 days ago

It’s discussed on the second page of the comments here:

https://www.theautopian.com/holy-crap-the-2cv-is-alive-and-driving/

Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
6 days ago
Reply to  Mike Harrell

Thanks! That’s a cool law

The Bishop's Brother
Member
The Bishop's Brother
6 days ago

Assuming he has his NC registration and plate in the car with him, yeah, he’s good, apparently. My car wears its modern plate, as I don’t want to have to be pulled over to show the modern one. I have its original Spanish plate on the front (NC is a one-plate state)

Camp Fire
Member
Camp Fire
6 days ago

Something I didn’t see mentioned in those comments…how did Torch wind up with an Argentinian junkyard plate? Seems like there should be a story behind that…

Camp Fire
Member
Camp Fire
5 days ago

Cool!

Thanks for sharing. The pictures seem to be missing. Have they gotten lost, or do I have a computer problem?

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
6 days ago

Since your drive seemed to have rattled some parts off of the vehicle, I’m curious. How did the basket of eggs make out?

Harveydersehen
Member
Harveydersehen
5 days ago

The eggs aren’t supposed to make out in the car. That’s how you get more eggs!

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
6 days ago

Did your 2 CV half boots on your 2CV stay together? How does the other half shaft look?
2CV or Not 2CV, That is the question!

CuppaJoe
Member
CuppaJoe
6 days ago

JT – Try some sound deadening mat product like Dynamat. I applied a bunch of this stuff to strategically placed locations in my 72 FJ40 and found it to be amazing. It’s not library quiet now, but no longer requires earplugs to drive.

I even put some on the underside of my floor mats. That helped a lot too!

Harveydersehen
Member
Harveydersehen
5 days ago
Reply to  CuppaJoe

A sheet of dynamat weighs more than the entire car though.

Jb996
Member
Jb996
6 days ago

It makes me very happy to see that you’re out driving it!

M. Park Hunter
Member
M. Park Hunter
6 days ago

There are few things that bring me greater joy than toodling along in an archaic and inadequate car, delighting me and everyone else. Except maybe whoever is behind me in the no-passing zone.

Enjoy, Torch. You deserve it.

Last edited 6 days ago by M. Park Hunter
Mark
Member
Mark
6 days ago

I will say this again, now on the more recent article.

Jason, please come to Lemons at NJMP in early June. I’m sure the judges will love your help, and I would love that bribe stencil.

84
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x