List of Citroën vehicles

A list of Citroën vehicles.

Passenger cars and vans

Pre war

  • Kégresse track
  • 7CV (1934–1935)
  • 7C (1935–1940)
  • 7U Rosalie (1935–1937)
  • 8CV Rosalie (1932–1935)
  • 8CV (1933–1934)
  • 8NH (1935–1936)
  • 10CV (1933–1934)
  • 11U Rosalie (1935–1937)
  • 11 (1935–1940)
  • 15 (1935–1936)
  • 15/6 (1939–1955)
  • Type A (1919–1921)
  • Type AC4 (1928–1929)
  • Type AC6 (1928–1929)
  • Type B (1921–1928)
  • Type B2 (1921–1926)
  • Type C C2-C3 (1922–1926)
  • C4 & C6 (1928–1934)
  • Traction Avant (1934–1957)
  • TUB van (1939–1941)

Post war (1945–1970)

Post war (1970–1980)

Recent

Citroëns

  • C-ZERO (2010) - an electric supermini/city car sold by Citroën, built by Mitsubishi Motors.
  • C1 (2005–present) - a 4-seat, 3 or 5-door hatchback, city car with 1.3L petrol or diesel engine, developed in conjunction with Toyota as the Aygo.
  • C3 (from October 2009) - a supermini car with a range of inline-4 engines, a 5-door version of the C2.
  • C4 (2004–present) - a small family car
    • C-Triomphe/Citroën C-Quatre. (2006–present)- a notchback sedan version of the European C4 for the Chinese market. In Europe, it is classified as a large family car, sold alongside C5.
    • C4 Picasso (2007–present) - a five-seater compact MPV
    • C4 Grand Picasso- (2007–present) - a seven-seater compact MPV
    • C4 Nouvelle - a variant of the C4 that closely resembles the C4 Picasso, but with noticeable differences, including a sleeker body shape.[1]
    • C4 Aircross (2012–present) AWD SUV
    • C4 Cactus - a small family car based on an extended version of the C3's PF1 platform
  • C5 (2008–present) - a large family car
  • Berlingo (1996–present) - a panel van and leisure activity vehicle,
  • Elysée - based on the Fukang which is a three-box ZX, the Elysée would appear to be a restyled version of this Chinese market car with a front end reminiscent of that of the Xsara, with many parts (including the dashboard) taken from the Citroën Xsara and Citroën Saxo, for the Chinese market
  • Jumpy (1995–present)- a small van produced at Sevel Nord and is badged as a Citroën Dispatch in the UK and Ireland,
  • Jumper (1994–present) - a large van produced by Sevel Sud from 1994 and is badged as the Citroën Relay in the UK and Ireland
  • Nemo (2008–present) - a small van,
    • Nemo Multispace is a small MPV

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Trucks and buses

Trucks

Buses

  • Citroën CH14 Currus
  • 1978 Citroën Heuliez C35
  • Jumper van bus
  • 1931 Citroën Type C6 Long
  • 1930s Type 23 bus
  • Type 46 DP UADI
  • 1935 Type 32B
  • 1932-33 Type C6 G1
  • Citroen u55 ch14 cityrama

Alternative fueled

Citroën Alternative propulsion includes the following:

Biofuels

Biofuel Citroëns include the Citroën C4 BioFlex (bioethanol flexible fuel vehicle).[2]

Electric and hybrid vehicles

In the earlier years, electric cars were produced, e.g. the AX electrique, Saxo electrique etc. but in smaller series.

In the hybrid electric vehicle strategy there are four concept cars HYmotion at the Paris Motor Show 2008: Hypnos,[3][4] illustrating the latest breakthroughs in this field with the hybrid technology HYmotion4; the C4 HYmotion2 and C-Cactus ( diesel-electric hybrid), reflecting Citroën's plans to integrate this promising solution in affordable mass-market vehicles; and the C4 WRC HYmotion4, extending ecological principles to sports cars.[5]

Citroën showed the plug-in hybrid REVOLTe at the 2009 Frankfurt Motorshow.[6][7]

Concept cars

Citroën has produced numerous concept cars over the decades, previewing future design trends or technologies. Notable concepts include the Citroën Karin (1980), Citroën Activa (1988), Citroën C-Métisse (2006), GT by Citroën (2008) and Citroën Survolt (2010).

4x4 Conversions

Citroën Berlingo with Dangel 4x4 system

Dangel, a French specialist automobile company based in Sentheim, Alsace, has produced 4x4 versions of Citroën and Peugeot vehicles since 1980. Its first conversion was the Peugeot 504. Dangel currently produces 4x4 conversions of the Citroën Berlingo, the Citroën Jumper and the Citroën Jumpy.[8]

Aircraft

In the early 1970s Citroën investigated the possibility of producing helicopters with the Wankel engines manufactured by its subsidiary Comotor.

  • RE2 Helicopter (flight-tested only)
  • Citroën GS BiRotor (flight-tested only)

References

  1. "Concept Cars". Citroën. Archived from the original on 2014-05-28.
  2. "Frankfurt Green: Citroen C-Cactus". thecarconnection.com. Retrieved 2007-09-19.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20090124171957/http://www.citroen.com/CWW/en-US/NEWS/NEWSRELEASES/LatestNewsReleases/080903_HYPNOS.htm. Archived from the original on January 24, 2009. Retrieved April 27, 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. Blanco, Sebastian (2008-10-02). "Paris 2008: Citroën's Hypnos brings the rainbow into your car". Autobloggreen.com. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
  5. Julian Marsh. "Citroën at the Paris Motor Show 2008". Citroenet.org.uk. Archived from the original on January 25, 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
  6. Ed (2009-09-16). "Citroen's REVOLTe - the electric 2CV". Gizmag.com. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
  7. "Citroen REVOLTe Concept (2009) with pictures and wallpapers". Netcarshow.com. 2009-09-30. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
  8. "Dangel 4x4 Experts en systèmes 4 roues motrices". Dangel.fr. Retrieved 2010-07-09.
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