Stop dreaming and start driving! C&SC tests the classics you can buy. Click here for the full listing – and read on for our expert’s conclusion.
This charming ‘ripple-bonnet’ Citroën 2CV has been rebuilt on a new galvanised chassis, and it is now very usable.
Mainly because the original 425cc motor, which makes early AZ versions painfully slow, has been replaced with a 602 and transmission from a 2CV6 or Dyane, bringing with it front disc brakes.
And though the V5C says 1962, which is when the car was first registered in the UK, the chassis number suggests 1961, while its features are pre-1960.
The paint looks shiny and new but is in fact quite old, signified by the bubbling under the windscreen to the left, and a bit of rust at the bottom of the door hinges.
Structurally it’s good, having received new floorpans and sills from The 2CV Shop in 2017, and the front wings appear to be newer because they house indicators.
The rear-light lenses are cracked and have been glued back together, but all the nice older details remain, such as C-pillar-mounted repeater lights and aluminium doorhandles.