Why does this keep happening

Don't give me your Wilson epicyclic pre-selector gearbox reminiscences...can't be doing with that English rubbish, apart from the Skoda my other car is a DS with gear change operated by hydaulics...which makes messing about with a Contax seem simple.
 
The 2CV is without doubt a wonderful and fascinating vehicle, but I'm a bit surprised at the first highlighted bit. After all, the plugs are going to short out in -- what? -- a foot of water.
No, they sit on top of the cylinders like a BMW boxer and the plug leads seal in much the same way. The first issue in deep water is when the bottom of the fan hits and throws water around. If you did swamp it, there is the trick of putting it in first gear and using the crankhandle to wind it out; of course you'll get your feet wet then. I'd say it probably takes 18" of water to kill it, minimum. Remember, they have high ground clearance anyway - unless heavily loaded! Also, many 4WD are pretend offroaders and I'm not including the "real" ones.
Second highlight: except (I have been told) for those front inboard drum brakes. Is this true?
The inboard drums were dropped long ago (1981 for the 2CV and earlier on Dyanes) for inboard force-cooled discs which are a doddle to change the pads in. The drums are less fun but once setup they stay good for a fair while.
I'd buy one but (1) they're now surprisingly expensive here in France and (2) Frances doesn't fancy fencing with the dashboard in order to change gear.

Cheers,

R.
They're surprisingly expensive here too; rarity value is kicking in as more and more got scrapped due to terminal tinworm. The dashboard gearchange is actually very easy to use and doesn't clutter the floor. Just pretend it's a 5-speed and 1st is missing (that's where reverse lives).
 
Don't give me your Wilson epicyclic pre-selector gearbox reminiscences...can't be doing with that English rubbish, apart from the Skoda my other car is a DS with gear change operated by hydaulics...which makes messing about with a Contax seem simple.
I envy you the DS but not the cost of buying or running one. Voted the most beautiful car ever and also (recently) voted the most technically advanced car ever. If I could afford it, it'd be my number one pick.
 
Working on the 2CV's brakes, stub-axles or king-pins are not for the faint hearted ... not to mention the hydraulics, roller-bearing swinging arm suspension and general French weirdness
The only issue I had in 10 years plus of ownership was the rear brake pipes. That's because later cars had rear seat belts and lost the access panel to the t-junction because of the belt-anchorage, making the job a nightmare. The kingpins are straightforward with a drift-set, the roller bearings rarely give trouble and the hydraulics are mainly unconventional in having no flexible hoses and using LHM fluid (which never needs changing). By French weirdness I think you probably mean Citroen. Unconventional is often innovative and that it was. Find me another engine that LJK Setright was unable to criticise and which can shrug off being run for 100 hours non-stop at maximum power and revs.
 
Bought ours many years ago when Summars were cheap.

The running costs are not that severe if you know what's what (and we have the Skoda!) but the prices seem out of step. Do they sell for the prices you see around? I doubt it...a bit like old cameras.

What one man might call a design icon another might call an MOT failure....
 
Consider yourself blessed. I've had 2 or 3 that worked well out-of-the-box then developed small issues, light leaks or whatever, after not that much use.


Oooh! Hater! Hater!


But, seriously: it's been 50/50 for me. And I'm not a hater.
 
Oooh! Hater! Hater!


But, seriously: it's been 50/50 for me. And I'm not a hater.

Perhaps the difference is between those of us who bought them new, or as recent second-hand cameras, in the 60s and 70s, and expected them to work as cameras (as even 30- and 40-year-old Leicas did, i.e. cameras from the 1930s) and those who are buying them today as toys.

If you're expecting a usable camera, even a 20% failure rate isn't too good.

Cheers,

R.
 
Perhaps the difference is between those of us who bought them new, or as recent second-hand cameras, in the 60s and 70s, and expected them to work as cameras (as even 30- and 40-year-old Leicas did, i.e. cameras from the 1930s) and those who are buying them today as toys.

If you're expecting a usable camera, even a 20% failure rate isn't too good.

Cheers,

R.

Wilfred Thesiger purchased a new Leica in the early 1930.s. It did not work `out of the box';)
French cars and FSU cameras - masochists :D
 
Oh, and please stop feeding my 2CV interests! The Mods will complain! Back to whether FSUs rock or not...

Wolves,

You are not allowed another 2CV until, like a proper Citroenist, you have saved a GS from the scrapyard.

For what it is worth, I went to college in Wolverhampton in the 60/70s. I remember buying a car that was the first registered in Wolverhampton after the war. Armstrong Siddeley EJW 72 (I think...)from an elderly couple on the Tettenhall Road??? Yes, pre-selector...

On a rather more photographic but hardly FSU topic I also bought a Leica II with a Thambar...long gone...and somewhere I still have loads of negs of canals and general industrial decline...but best of all some pics of castings being made in buildings with sand floors by elderly chaps in Leather aprons.

Give me the Black Country every time...far more girls than California...Bilston rocks!

Reminiscent rant ends!
 
Wolves,

You are not allowed another 2CV until, like a proper Citroenist, you have saved a GS from the scrapyard.

For what it is worth, I went to college in Wolverhampton in the 60/70s. I remember buying a car that was the first registered in Wolverhampton after the war. Armstrong Siddeley EJW 72 (I think...)from an elderly couple on the Tettenhall Road??? Yes, pre-selector...

On a rather more photographic but hardly FSU topic I also bought a Leica II with a Thambar...long gone...and somewhere I still have loads of negs of canals and general industrial decline...but best of all some pics of castings being made in buildings with sand floors by elderly chaps in Leather aprons.

Give me the Black Country every time...far more girls than California...Bilston rocks!

Reminiscent rant ends!

hey, i`ve done that. Also saw a HY [ or is it HU ] truck earlier this week. its a replica, they are extremely rare around here. Once i get film developed will upload into this thread
 
Back
Top Bottom