Jump to content

HMC- 1979 escort 1.3GL is here!


HMC

Recommended Posts

My Land Rover 90 V8 with the twin-carb 3528cc and manual box could never better 15mpg, so I'm pretty sure this'll be horrific. 

 

I had a RR 3.5 V8 in a S2 Lt/Wt even with RR diffs it never topped 14mpg.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This old c class has been great, in that it does everything you'd expect a car as an appliance to and is an undemanding thing to drive and own. At the weekend (and after delivery of the LDV V8, more of which anon) we are off to Germany to stay with the in laws near Dortmund/ Cologne. I've given it a precautionary basic service and it wears some all season tyres to satisfy German regs. Probably around 2000 miles ahead of it all told.

 

Right now though it's doing the just as important a job of transporting me to my fave pizza takeaway.....

 

post-4673-0-10798600-1514920510_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Every French-market old Citroen I've ever driven (scores of) has driven better than 19 out of 20 rhd ones, especially in the engine dept. Why? I think the maintenance standards are higher there than here, plus go back 20 years and the smallest independent workshop knew the cars well. Then there's the roads - the cars were more likely driven as intended. And not to forget the assemblers went out of their way to save all the marginal-tolerance parts for the rhd versions.

 

Good purchase? Hope so. I had a gf booked for doing 110+ in one of these on the M1.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Every French-market old Citroen I've ever driven (scores of) has driven better than 19 out of 20 rhd ones, especially in the engine dept. Why? I think the maintenance standards are higher there than here, plus go back 20 years and the smallest independent workshop knew the cars well. Then there's the roads - the cars were more likely driven as intended. And not to forget the assemblers went out of their way to save all the marginal-tolerance parts for the rhd versions.

 

I think the French can neglect their cars just as well as we can, I think the difference in the driving pleasure is because the pedals, controls and dash were designed for LHD and RHD has degraded that, especially the brakes on a Visa!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the French can neglect their cars just as well as we can, I think the difference in the driving pleasure is because the pedals, controls and dash were designed for LHD and RHD has degraded that, especially the brakes on a Visa!

 

Indeed. Still annoys me that the handbrake on the 2CV never moved for RHD. The wipers are ever so slightly off-centre, again for better clearing in LHD form. Mind you, on RHD 2CVs, you get TWO windscreen demisters. How's that for posh?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

GSA has one of the best of Citroen's wacky instrument panels doesn't it?  Huge backlit diagram of the car up top with the warning lights, then rotating drum readouts for everything else below?  Of course the pods with everything else on flanking it.

 

Photos please...this *definitely* needs to appear in the Dash at Night thread.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

^ yes that was the one, the vendor is mid house move and it had slipped his mind, now gone!

 

Having a quick pee stop on the m4 somewhere en route to Germany in the 1998 c class. I love the cruise control on mercs, a single column stalk, so simple. The stalk design on this was identical in my 86 560SEC and my 2008 E220, a design classic Amongst switchgear. Can you tell I'm bored? Better get on I've got a ferry to catch.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

GSA has one of the best of Citroen's wacky instrument panels doesn't it?  Huge backlit diagram of the car up top with the warning lights, then rotating drum readouts for everything else below?  Of course the pods with everything else on flanking it.

 

Photos please...this *definitely* needs to appear in the Dash at Night thread.

3445b13ffff0ac9ae14a37889ef63173.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's the one!  Had forgotten some of the indicator lights were actually on the left pod too.

 

As a kid I was fascinated by instrument panel design, so have always wanted to get a proper look at a GSA dash.  Just so utterly bonkers - yet at least according to my uncle who had one for several years, actually works just fine once the initial wtf reaction has worn off.

 

Nothing like that would make it off the drawing board these days!  I miss wacky Citroen dashes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's the one! Had forgotten some of the indicator lights were actually on the left pod too.

 

As a kid I was fascinated by instrument panel design, so have always wanted to get a proper look at a GSA dash. Just so utterly bonkers - yet at least according to my uncle who had one for several years, actually works just fine once the initial wtf reaction has worn off.

This was repeated on the Visa.

 

The CX had a similar setup, but the bathroom scales speedo and rev counter were only on the Series 1 cars from 1974 to 1985. My CX is a 1988 Series 2, so I have the same fingertip controls but conventional dials. Those dials include an electric dipstick gauge which tells you the oil level in the sump - quite accurate.

 

The fingertip pods on each side of the steering wheel really do work if you keep your hands at 10-to-2: everything falls instantly into place.

 

Nothing like that would make it off the drawing board these days! I miss wacky Citroen dashes.

In many ways, today's dashes are all wacky - LCD / LED monitor style displays, sat nav screens, etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the French can neglect their cars just as well as we can, I think the difference in the driving pleasure is because the pedals, controls and dash were designed for LHD and RHD has degraded that, especially the brakes on a Visa!

Yes, so often rhd cars have awkwardness which isn't there when lhd but it's a noticed difference in performance I was on about, not pleasure - not something perceived, but measured and checked with instruments.

 

The French traditionally treated their cars pied a plancher from stone cold, the agricultural classes were poorer and more miserly than any of ours (that's one reason Citroen marked so many parts on 2cvs, since they'd buy a new one then swap over broken mechanical bits from the old and try to have them replaced under warranty). A base 1 litre 205 would serve as daily commuter as well as the family transport from Paris to the South for the summer holidays. Fully loaded and flat out.

 

Perhaps the engines wear smoother when used like that, perhaps the greater distances covered mean a car wouldn't go 2 or 3 years without an oil change as they often do here? Look on Leboncoin and see all those 400k+ km 406s, even today anything more than 200,000 miles is seen as moonship in England.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...