Citroën Axel

Citroën Axel
Overview
Manufacturer Citroën
Also called Oltcit Club
Production 1984–1990
Assembly Craiova, Romania
Body and chassis
Class Supermini
Body style 3-door hatchback
Layout FF layout
Powertrain
Engine
  • 652 cc air-cooled H2
  • 1129 cc air-cooled H4
  • 1299 cc air-cooled H4
Dimensions
Wheelbase 2,370 mm (93 in)
Length 3,732 mm (146.9 in)
Width 1,538 mm (60.6 in)
Height 1,430 mm (56.3 in)
Curb weight 875 kg (1,929 lb)
Chronology
Predecessor Citroën Ami
Citroën Dyane
Successor Citroën AX

The Citroën Axel was a supermini automobile produced between 1984 and 1990 and developed in co-operation by Citroën of France and Oltcit, a joint venture company with the Romanian government.

The Axel was a rebadged version of the small Oltcit Club hatchback. Four specifications were available: Axel Club, Axel 11, Axel 11R and Axel 12 TRS. They were powered by the air-cooled engines from the Citroën GS/GSA and an air-cooled flat-twin engine from the Citroën Visa. The Axel Club was only available in Romania.

The five-door Citroën Visa and the three-door Axel look very similar, but there is no part interchangeable between these two Citroën models.

Development history

From 1965 Robert Opron worked on the Citroën G-mini prototype and project EN101, a projected replacement for the 2CV using that car's flat twin engine. It was supposed to be launched in 1970. The advanced space-efficient designs, with very compact exterior dimensions and an aerodynamic drag co-efficient Cd of 0.32, were axed because of adverse feedback from potential clients.[1] The more conservative final design has a Cd of 0.36 (for the Axel 12 TRS, 0.37 for the Axel 11).[2]

Citroën Axel 11

The early seventies Citroën Prototype Y, intended to replace the 2CV-based Citroën Ami which dated back to 1960, was originally developed in co-operation with Fiat. It built on the lessons from the Citroën G-mini and EN101 projects. It used the then new and advanced Fiat 127 platform, featuring a transversely mounted engine driving the front wheels, with an end-on gearbox layout that Fiat had pioneered in the 1960s. When cooperation with Fiat ended, a new Citroën-designed platform was planned. After the takeover of Citroën by Peugeot in the wake of the 1974 oil crisis, the renamed "Projet VD (Voiture Diminuée)" became the Citroën Visa, incorporating the floor pan of the Peugeot 104 and using the advanced 104 engine with the (under-engine) transmission and chassis.[3] It was the first new model under the platform-sharing policy of PSA Peugeot Citroën that continues today. The earlier Citroën LN was no more than a facelift of the Peugeot 104Z "Shortcut" with a re-engine and transmission from the Citroën Dyane.

Eventually, in 1981, the original Citroën platform design from "Project Y" emerged as an Oltcit in Romania, using a Citroën Visa flat-twin engine and Citroën GS-based gearbox, and Citroën GS flat-four engine and gearbox. Beginning in July 1984, it was also sold in Western Europe as the Citroën Axel.[2] Citroën was hoping to recoup money that Citroën had invested in Romania that the communist government couldn't repay. The Axel had been scheduled for an earlier introduction, but Oltcit had been unable to provide either the quality or the quantity expected by their French partners. This project was problematic for Citroën due to productivity and build quality issues and 60,184 cars were made, even though the base models were priced below the 2CV in Western Europe. The Axel was never sold in the UK.

When launched in France, Citroën acknowledged that the Axel was a competitor of their Visa. However, that the Axel only had three doors and was of a simpler, more robust design was considered enough to offset any possible loss of (already shrinking) Visa sales.[4] The four-cylinder Axel 11 was 10 percent cheaper than a two-cylinder Visa in the French market. It also had a particularly low rear loading height, which, with its sturdy, basic construction, contributed to being particularly well received by farmers and denizens of smaller towns.[4]

Models

Specifications

Version Engine Power. Max speed.
Club 652 cc flat-2 air-cooled 34 hp (25 kW) @ 5250 r/min 75 mph (121 km/h)
11R 1129 cc flat-4 air-cooled 57 hp (43 kW) @ 6250 r/min 93 mph (150 km/h)
12 TRS 1299 cc flat-4 air-cooled 61 PS (45 kW; 60 hp) @ 5500 r/min 98 mph (158 km/h)

See also

References

  1. Julian Marsh. "Citroën G-mini prototype and projet EN101". Citroenet.org.uk. Retrieved 2012-09-14.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Mastrostefano, Raffaele, ed. (1985). Quattroruote: Tutte le Auto del Mondo 1985 (in Italian). Milano: Editoriale Domus S.p.A. p. 206. ISBN 88-7212-012-8.
  3. "Projet Y". Citroënet. Retrieved 2010-01-07.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Bellevue, Jean (September 1984). Cropley, Steve, ed. "Oracle". Car (London, UK: FF Publishing): 61.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oltcit vehicles.