I know some of you wish you could swap your boring family tintops for a 205 so I thought I'd share my trip over to work this morning with you to
help bring back fond memories.
I decided to drive in rather than take the train so I could go out tonight, so bright and early in the (wintery) sunshine I headed out to my car. I
hopped in, pulled the door shut and was about to set her in motion when the door slowly creaked open again, a couple of slams later it became apparent
the door locking mechanism was playing up. Eventually after unlocking and locking the boot it fixed itself and I clambered aboard - secure.
Turning the key VYL immediately roared into life. Then just as rapidly stuttered out of it again. Restarting it I applied some of the good stuff and
eventually she settled down to a steady 2k rpm idle.
Reversing out of the drive my windscreen began to steam up so I cranked the heater controls to 90 degrees past maximum, "feet only" and a
quarter of the way up the heat dial (anymore and the knob falls out).
Putting the car into first to move myself from straddling two lanes the car promptly stalled, but after 8 more start-go-stalls she was back to full
form.
Low on fuel (as usual when she drinks about 20mpg) I pulled into the petrol station and spent a frantic 5 minutes trying to release myself from the
seat belt. After parting with my cash I returned to the car, unlocked it from the boot, and turned the ignition, the starter purred into life.. and
that was it. On the fifth try VYL realised what I was after and the engine revved into action and at a lumpy 800 rpm idle.
The rest of the journey was smooth until a kind gentleman following me flashed me over to the side of the road and helpfully informed me my brake
lights weren't working. He serenely drove on, and I decided to make the last dash to the carpark.
Unfortunately, however, VYL had gone to sleep and turning the key did absolutely nothing apart from turn the dash on and off. This was sorted by
putting her in 4th and firmly taking her by the door frame and shaking her forcefully from side to side, which reactivated the engine bay.
I'm now about to head home from work early so I can get it in the garage with the minimum amount of risk to other drivers from my undetectable
braking. At least it doesn't look like its going to rain, the sunroof basically operates as a sieve.
Bet you wish you could swap me for your sluggish, modern and expensive motors now don't you
That's like a comedy sketch...
Fantastic! Sounds a lot more fun than my Prius
That is why i love old cars.
You wouldnt get an eventful drive like that from these modern lumps
Mine was never that bad, but I still want another
Now that is what you call 'character' - something lacking in modern cars!
I had a 205 as my first car which I replaced with a brand new top of the range Panda in may and I do at times still miss it. The 3 door 205 is such a
beautifull shape.
I had an auto and when I started it I knew that until it was warmed up I could only use one direction, forward or back, as it would cut out and take
alot of restarting (And who thought the auto choke was a good idea) I had to turn it round in entry ways and use nutreal to roll back, and often had
to push it alot to stop it going out.
I only got read of it because things kept going on it and costing me time and money, the ignition amp was the last straw as it left me car less for a
week and killed my radio, weirdly the amp seemed to be the only part stamped made in Germany.
I hope to one day have another one, a GTi or a Gentry maybe.
quote:
Originally posted by SeaBass
That's like a comedy sketch...
quote:
I reaalllly want a sporty, modern diesel.
quote:
Originally posted by SeaBass
That's like a comedy sketch...
My XR3 (no i) was much the same (sigh). Wondered why it always smelled of petrol, lad I bought it off never put more than a couple of quid in it, the filler tube had rusted completely off the tank. Found out when I tried to put £20 in it once, ended up in a big puddle of leaded.
reminds me of my K reg 106 (I still call it mine - even if its really macspeedy's now )
I nearly didn't make it home once when the ingition amp died, the engine cut out at 70mph, complete with comedy puff of smoke from the clutch
but it managed to limp home and finaly gave up completly 20 yard from the garage
but mine was so simple that there wasn't much on it to break, I just seemed to cause alot more work for myself when I serviced it (like swapping
the gearbox, only to find it was a wheel bearing all along )
The bit I love with Pugs is when you drive in a spirited fashion over a hump or bridge they promptly head in to the under growth the other side as the rear suspension compresses.
on a less humorous note, just got home after leaving work at 3 .
Electrical fault stopped the fuel pump.
I'm getting rid
I had a G reg 1.6 GTi some years back. Loved it, except....
1. Stopped for petrol, filled the tank, paid, turned the key - lights on the dash but no start. The little Lucar terminal on the starter motor had
broken due to corrosion.
2. Stopped outside the paper shop, bought a paper, turned the key - nothing, nothing at all. Deduced that the immobiliser was being bolshy so spent
the next hour unplumbing it at the roadside to the accompaniment of suspicious glances from passers by.
Apart from that, great car.....oh, except for the heater matrix springing a leak; took the whole dashboard/console out and then realised it was
actually quite easy to change with little disruption.
John.
I'm lucky enough to be able to thrash my 205 where suitable and then trailer it home And to be fair in 2 seasons hillclimbing it's needed
very little!
Don't you find that, as much as the 'frenchness' becomes irritating, everytime you find a nice twisty, empty piece of road you remember
why you bought it in the first place? I certainly did with my AX GT. So much fun in the right place!
quote:
Originally posted by fov
The bit I love with Pugs is when you drive in a spirited fashion over a hump or bridge they promptly head in to the under growth the other side as the rear suspension compresses.
The best French cars have the ultimate cure for that, Citroen Hydronumatic suspension, great when it works.