Citroën Traction Avant

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Citroën Traction Avant
Citroën Traction Avant
Manufacturer: Citroën
Production: 1934-1957
Predecessor: Citroën Type C
Successor: Citroën DS
Body style: 2-door coupé
4-door sedan
Engine: 1.3 L I4
1.9 L I4
2.9 L I6
Designer: André Lefèbvre
The rear of a Citroën Traction Avant
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The rear of a Citroën Traction Avant

The Citroën Traction Avant was an automobile produced by the French manufacturer Citroën. About 760,000 units were manufactured from 1934 to 1957.

Contents

[edit] Impact on the world

The Traction Avant, designed by André Lefèbvre in late 1933/early 1934, was the first front-wheel drive car in large scale production. (Traction Avant is French for front-wheel drive, literally meaning "front traction".) Cord had built front-wheel drive vehicles a few years earlier in limited quantities at high prices. It set the template for modern car design still followed today.

The car introduced the use of an arc-welded monocoque frame, where other cars of the era were based on a frame onto which the body ("coachwork") was built. Monocoque construction results in a lighter vehicle, and is now used for virtually all car construction, although body-on-frame construction is still suitable for larger vehicles such as trucks.

This method of construction was viewed with great suspicion in many quarters, with doubts about its strength. A type of crash test was developed, taking the form of driving the car off a cliff, to illustrate its great inherent resilience.

The novel design made the car seem very low-slung relative to its contemporaries - the Traction Avant always possessed a unique look, which went from appearing rakish in 1934 to familiar and slightly old fashioned by 1955.

The suspension was very advanced for the car's era. The front wheels were independently sprung, using a torsion bar and wishbone suspension arrangement, where most contemporaries used live axle and cart-type leaf spring designs. The rear suspension was a simple steel beam axle and Panhard rod with unequal trailing arms, to allow the two torsion bars to run parallel to each other, across the car's width.

Since it was considerably lighter than "conventional" designs of the era, it was capable of 100 km/h (62 mph), very fast for the era, and using only 10.0 L of gasoline per 100 km (24 mpg U.S.).

The original models were a small sedan with a 1303 cc engine. This model was called the 7A, which was succeeded in June 1934 by the 7B and 7C with higher powered engines of 1529 and 1628 cc respectively. Later models such as the larger 11A had a four-cylinder 1911 cc engine with the "big six" having a 2867 cc six-cylinder.

Citroën planned two variants that never entered production, since there was not enough funding available to develop them, except as running prototype vehicles. One was an automatic transmission-equipped model and the other was a 22CV model with a large V8 engine.

In addition to the 4-door body, the car was also produced as a 2-door coupe with a rumble seat, as a convertible and as an extended length model with three rows of seats. There was even a hatchback-type Commerciale variant, in 1939, well ahead of its time, in which the tailgate was in two halves, the lower of which carried the spare wheel with the upper opening up to roof level. A one-piece top-hinged tailgate was introduced when the Commerciale resumed production in 1954 after being suspended during World War II.

The Commerciale hatchback Traction Avant
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The Commerciale hatchback Traction Avant

The Traction Avant used a mid-engined, front-wheel drive layout, with the transmission ahead of the differential and front axle, resulting in a very favorable location for the center of gravity of the vehicle, aiding the car's advanced handling characteristics. This layout was later carried forward to the Citroën DS and Citroën SM. The gear change was set in the dashboard, with the lever protruding through a vertical, H-shaped gate. Because this vertical orientation could have resulted in the car dropping out of gear when the lever was in the upper positions (i.e. second or reverse gears), the gear shift mechanism was locked when the mechanical clutch was engaged and released when the clutch pedal was depressed. The result of this layout, along with pendant pedals, umbrella-type handbrake control and front bench seats, was a very spacious interior, with a flat and unobstructed floor.

Left-hand drive versions were built in Paris, France and Forest, Belgium, and right-hand drive cars were built in Slough, England. The Slough car was called the Light Fifteen and the long wheelbase version, the Big Fifteen. They were equipped with the leather seats and wooden dashboards popular in the UK, had a 12-volt electrical system and were distinguished by a sliding sunroof, different radiator grille and different bumpers (fenders).

[edit] Impact on Citroën

1954 six cylinder 15CV with hydropneumatic suspension fitted to the rear wheels - in 'high' position
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1954 six cylinder 15CV with hydropneumatic suspension fitted to the rear wheels - in 'high' position

The development costs of the Traction Avant were very high and Citroën declared bankruptcy in 1934. The largest creditor was Michelin, who then owned Citroën from 1934 until 1976. Under Michelin, Citroën was run as a research laboratory, a test bed for their radial tires and new automotive technologies.

In 1954 Citroën's experiments with hydropneumatic technology produced its first result, the "15CVH" - a top of range 6-cylinder model, with a self-leveling rear suspension.

By 1955 Citroën stunned the world with the replacement for the Traction Avant, the DS.

Production of the Traction Avant ended in July 1957; over 23 years, 760,000 were built, the total reflecting the production stoppage during World War II.

[edit] The Traction Avant today

As of 2006, the oldest surviving 7A has production number ("coque nr") AZ 00-18, and is displayed in partly dismantled shape (engine and front wheels detached) in the Citroën Museum in Paris. The oldest running 7A is probably number AZ-00-23, which was, until September 1, 2006, in possession of a Dutch owner and is now with a Slovenian owner.

Traction Avant as modern wedding car
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Traction Avant as modern wedding car

Traction Avants are fairly robust vehicles. Every few years, Traction Avant enthusiasts ship their vehicles to an exotic location for a rally. In 2002, for example, a group of over 30 Tractions drove from Los Angeles to New York without incident.

[edit] Traction Avant in film

The Traction Avant is generally associated in movie iconography with the Second World War: the typical cliché is that of Gestapo agents, clad in black, driving around in black Traction Avants. There is some validity to this image, as German occupation forces did indeed admire the car for its handling qualities and speed. The police and criminals in France also preferred the car for this reason.

  • The film The Great Escape featured a Traction Avant driven by members of the French Resistance where three Nazi officers were killed in a drive-by shooting (this particular scene occurs after James Coburn receives a phone call).
  • In The Sound of Music, the final escape from the Nazis is by Traction Avant
  • James Bond is followed by a Traction Avant driven by a Bulgarian agent in From Russia with Love
  • Cary Grant and Grace Kelly are pursued by a Traction Avant through the mountains of Cote d'Azur in To Catch a Thief
  • The car humorously appeared in the film Diva set in Paris in 1981. A bourgeois uses a white example of this car as a decoy to trap a corrupt politician; it explodes, but he has another identical car, so he can keep driving a white Traction Avant to match his white suit. The Traction Avant is a character in the film, and the narrator notes that both criminals and police preferred this car for making rapid getaways or pursuits, as the case may be.

[edit] External links

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