The interior is low-key to the point that the chrome decoration on the dashboard appears almost out of place. The specification also includes retractable front head restraints that carry the disconcerting air of a guillotine.
For urban duties “the steering lock is excellent”, according to Hasson, and this example boasts a five-speed gearbox from a 504 Pick-up. “The Peugeot can easily cruise at 70-75mph and keeps up with motorway traffic well,” he adds.
The Peugeot’s Achilles’ heel in Europe was corrosion, a fault it admittedly shared with countless other contemporaries, but this was not as much of an issue in other sales territories.
And the 504 was truly a ‘world car’: it was assembled or manufactured in Argentina and Chile, in Australia, along with China, Egypt, Ireland, Kenya, Portugal, South Africa, Spain and Taiwan. Hasson’s business involved buying them, breaking them for spares or taking them to Africa, and he’s driven across the Sahara Desert no fewer than seven times.
He currently owns three Peugeots: “I bought my first 504 in 1982, and since then I’ve not driven anything else when I am in the UK.”
The enlarged Avenger-esque body shape of the Chrysler 2 Litre hints at its family heritage, while the Peugeot 504 and Fiat 132 perfectly represent their marques’ lineage
Each of our group would have carved a distinct niche in the realm of smart motoring at a time of fondue parties and discreetly boasting of owning a colour television set.
The Peugeot was the conveyance for those who had little time for what he or she regarded as gimmicky or frivolous, and who appreciated the innate quality of the 504. The advertisement’s claim that the Peugeot was ‘the best-made performance car in the 2-litre class’ was wholly justifiable, and the GL would have been ideal for the driver who demanded prestigious, reliable transport with
a certain Gallic charm.
The Chrysler 2 Litre’s role was to provide a degree of glamour at a price within reach of the average office manager or senior sales consultant. Had Chrysler decided to follow the original plan, which was to employ the Humber name and use a range of new V6 engines, it might have enjoyed a higher profile in the UK.
As it was, the 2 Litre was perfect for the sort of pub landlord who desired the style of a Datsun 280C or a Mercury Monarch Ghia, even, but without the inevitable fuel bills. And, in terms of late-1970s business culture, Beverly Moss from Abigail’s Party fame would almost certainly have barked that a Chrysler in brown metallic paint was the pinnacle of social achievement.
All three are now rare sightings in the wild – the Peugeot being the most numerous at around 30 or so left. The 132 is believed to be down to eight examples, while the hens’-teeth 2 Litre could be one of only two left on the road
The Bellini belongs with the Talbot-Matra Rancho or the HB-series Vauxhall Viva GT in that select category of cars that use their amiable flamboyance as their main selling tool.
This 132 among 132s appealed to anyone who wore Aviator sunglasses indoors. It would have appeared the height of Continental sophistication to a Terry Scott-style next-door neighbour.
Arriving home 40 years ago in a black Fiat 132 Bellini with Jona Lewie’s You’ll Always Find Me In The Kitchen At Parties blaring out through the sunroof would have prompted a formation bout of curtain-twitching. And that is exactly why it is my car of choice.
Images: John Bradshaw. Thanks to Fiat Motor Club GB; Ian Kirwood and Club Peugeot UK; Kate’s Cabin Café of Alwalton; Anglia Ruskin University; Vindis Ducati of Peterborough
FACTFILES
CHRYSLER 2 LITRE
- Sold/number built 1973-’81/294,760 (160, 180 & 2 Litre)
- Construction steel monocoque
- Engine iron-block, alloy-head, sohc 1981cc ‘four’, Weber carburettor
- Max power 110bhp @ 5800rpm
- Max torque 119lb ft @ 3400rpm
- Transmission three-speed auto, RWD
- Suspension: front independent, by MacPherson struts, anti-roll bar rear live axle, radius arms, Panhard rod, coil springs, telescopic dampers
- Steering rack and pinion
- Brakes discs, with servo
- Length 14ft 10in (4527mm)
- Width 5ft 8in (1728mm)
- Height 4ft 9in (1450mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 9in (2667mm)
- Weight 2481lb (1125kg)
- 0-60mph 12.5 secs
- Top speed 106mph
- Mpg 34
- Price new £1822 (1973)
- Price now c£4000
FIAT 132 BELLINI
- Sold/number built 1973-’81/600,000 (all)
- Construction steel monocoque
- Engine iron-block, alloy-head, dohc 1995cc ‘four’, Weber or Solex carburettor
- Max power 112bhp @ 5600rpm
- Max torque 116lb ft @ 3000rpm
- Transmission five-speed manual or three-speed auto, RWD
- Suspension: front independent, by double wishbones, anti-roll bar rear live axle, radius arms; coil springs, telescopic dampers f/r
- Steering worm and roller
- Brakes discs front, drums rear, with servo
- Length 14ft 5in (4392mm)
- Width 5ft 41/2in (1638mm)
- Height 4ft 81/4in (1435mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 41/2in (2557mm)
- Weight 2514lb (1140kg)
- 0-60mph 11.6 secs
- Top speed 105mph
- Mpg 34
- Price new £6200 (1979)
- Price now £6-10,000
PEUGEOT 504GL
- Sold/number built 1968-’83/3,173,191 (all)
- Construction steel monocoque
- Engine iron-block, alloy-head, ohv 1971cc ‘four’, Solex carburettor or injection
- Max power 98bhp @ 5600rpm
- Max torque 124lb ft @ 3000rpm
- Transmission four-speed manual or three-speed ZF auto, RWD
- Suspension: independent at front by MacPherson struts, anti-roll bar rear semi-trailing arms, torque tube, coil springs, telescopic dampers
- Steering rack and pinion
- Brakes discs
- Length 14ft 9in (4496mm)
- Width 5ft 7in (1702mm)
- Height 4ft 9in (1448mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 11in (2740mm)
- Weight 2734lb (1240kg)
- 0-60mph 12.3 secs
- Top speed 103 mph
- Mpg 29.4
- Price new £1807 (1972)
- Price now £6-12,000
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Andrew Roberts
Andrew is a long-time contributor to Classic & Sports Car