3 Reasons Not to Hate the French Cars.
3 Reasons not to hate French cars.
I spend a lot of time reading comments on the internet that express the hate that some people have against French cars. So I think I need to clarify some things about them, to show you that they deserve some love.
I’m not writing this as a propaganda for the French brands nor because I’m a pro-French things, but because I’m a true car lover, and as a car guy, you may understand me when I say that hating a car brand just because you don’t like the car’s design or nationality is plain stupidity, we all have our own tastes. So here are some things you should know about me: first of all, yes, I’m French. Secondly, I love cars in general: I drive a 2005 Citroën Xsara Break (diesel, 90hp, 100k miles), and my two dream cars are a 1970 Dodge Charger R/T and a 1995 Nissan Skyline R33 GT-R. And Finally, this is my first article, and English isn’t my native language (obviously), so please, be kind.
But let’s not make you wait any longer, here are my pros :
1. The place of France in the Automotive History
Nicolas-Joseph Cugnot, a French inventor, is widely credited with building the first full-scale, self-propelled mechanical vehicle or automobile in about 1769; he created a steam-powered tricycle called "Le Fardier de Cugnot". Father Ferdinand Verbiest, a Belgian Flemish Jesuit missioner, may have been the first to design and most likely to build, around 1672, "a steam-powered vehicle" but that was too small to carry a driver or passengers.
In November 1881, French inventor Gustave Trouvé demonstrated a working three-wheeled car powered by electricity at the International Exposition of Electricity, Paris.
The first car to pass the 100km/h bar was the French electric car "La Jamais contente" (literally translated as "the never satisfied").
The outlines of the current car as we know it are plotted in 1922 with Lancia Lambda and the self-supporting body and independent front suspension, in 1934 with Chrysler Airflow which introduced the aerodynamics, Citroen and the development of the Traction Avant (FWD) in 1934, and the introduction of disc brakes on the DS in 1955, or by Porsche and the box bevel gear synchronizers of the 356 and finally in 1959 with the Mini Morris with the first engine in transverse position.
2. They are great cars
This is one of the most untrue stereotype about the French Brands: "They aren’t reliable". My very first car was a 1997 Citroën ZX Break. Not very beautiful, but it had its charm. I sold it a few months ago for 250€, with +330k kms (more than 206k miles) and some bumps and scrathes (was involved in 4 small crashes, not by me and never in fault). Electric windows? Still working! Anti-start code device? Tired but working too! The lights on the dashboard were a bit too feeble, but she was still ready to eat the road for a long time.
And that’s what all French cars are, cars. by this, I mean that they are great cars that won’t fail you. Of course there are some that are worse than the others, but it’s the same for every car brand.
Indeed, I won’t deny that at some point of their own History, some French brands had a bad time. It happens, but sadly as we say "Il faut plusieurs générations pour bâtir une réputation, mais il n’en faut qu’une pour la détruire", which means "you need several generations to build a reputation, but only one to destroy it".
Nowadays French car brands are way better than you could think, so good that other brands uses engines, bodies or entire cars for their own product range (for example, Mercedes uses DCI engines from Renault for their A, B and C classes or the body of the Renault Kangoo for their compact utility vehicle Citane).
And indeed, don’t mix Quality and Reliability.
3. Their Racing Gene.
A little quote of Forza Motorsport 3, during the loading screen, once said "Peugeot is the only manufacturer that can brag about having victory records in three different centuries". That is actually true. Not only as a car maker of course, but that sentence still says something.
You know them : Bugatti, Alpine, Renault, Citroën, Peugeot, Matra,… Rally, Formula One, LeMans Endurance series, BTCC, WTCC, Pikes Peak,…
Every French Car Brand has won in Racing. And every french sports car has it in its genes. They even said in right here, on CT! "If you’re a keen driver, you need to get the RCZ R. Trust me. Every aspect of the way it drives when you’re kicking its head in is leaps and bounds ahead of the TT, and I guarantee after a hoon in both, the Peugeot’s the one that’ll put the bigger smile on your face. Badge snobs be damned." Want to know more about that? It’s here : link text .
Ever drove a 205 1.9 GTI? A test driver once said "You’ll need racing skills to master this monster". 130hp only? Yup, but power never ment performance. You know what someone said : "If you’re not fast with 90hp, 900 won’t help you". That’s what is all about French sports car, power isn’t necessary if you have the right chassis.
That is all I can say for now, without making an extra-long article that would be too consistent to be readable. So if you’ve reached this point, thank you for the time you spent reading this and I hope that you’re more likely to not spread the hate, for our Frenchies and for all cars in general, because after all, it’s just a matter of opinion.
Little bonus : I want to clarify something that seems to be a good starting point of hate about French cars : the Volvo vs Modus Crash test. Yes, old Volvo’s are known for being Tanks. No, the engine hasn’t been removed for the crash test, it’s just that it is not in a transversal position but in a longitudinal position, so when the two car went on a 3/4 front collision, the engine was moved on left-side of the engine bay. No, the Volvo isn’t safer than a Modus. Why? Because the Volvo was engineered during an era when Euro N-CAP wasn’t there to rule the safety of the cars. So yes it was a tank back then, but now it isn’t anymore. Sorry guys.
And for the video where you can see a red Volvo wagon hit some old cars on a scrapyard, you can clearly see that they are using things as ramps to avoid the high strength parts of the cars that are normally collided during a crash, this resulting on a heavier car crashing with it’s own strengthened body parts on cars-parts where it’s not supposed to crash. So it may appear that the Volvo is a true tank, but it’s just tricks and lies. Sorry again guys…
Internet traditions must be respected, Sorry for the long post so here is a potato-car :
Comments
Why show us a potato car when there’s a frickin’ snow speeder!
That’s an internet tradition mate, potato is sacred ! But yeah, noticed that speeder ;)
I have a new-found respect for the driver who drives a (one of the few functioning examples in the U.S. I might add) Pugeot 505 in my town. It is ratty, it is baby blue, and it has plumes of smoke shooting out of the tailpipe, but it still marches on into the unknown, enduring the years as the paint gets worse and the plastic gets yet another crack. I solute you Pugeot, for making a car that can withstand the test of time just as well as a diesel Mercedes or a Volvo 240. Perhaps one day your decedents will breach our shores again without the need for hiding behind a different badge.
Peugeots from this era are found in Africa, still running and fighting the weather conditions are good old cars they are. Even badly treated they will still run.
Starts racing dad’s peugeot 807…
Love french cars - Peugeot mainly. Now running a 2005 407sw 2.0 136 hdi. Had it from new and it just passed 280000km - has never had a problem. I also have a 405mi16x4 from 1990. It’s run 315000km. Before these rep, a Citroën berlingo (engine swapped for a2liter = 175 whp instead of the factory 90), 405 1,6, Citroën AX GTi.Just Love them.
it’s all very good, but most french cars are still plastic-y rubbish. Take for example second gen Megane or Laguna - dreadful things, with huge interior electrical problems and crappy interior. Never ones are not that much better. Biggest problem for me is that they are just SOME cars. I like my cars to be interesting, even in a smallest ways and those cars aren’t. Before you start hating - my parents have now second showroom-fresh Citroen, so i actually drive those cars. But Renault’s RS models are great and i’m m seacrhing market for 2nd gen Megane RS or Clio RS. France - please stop making bad cars and look at Peugeot 208! This is what we want from you!
Second gen Renault were all rubbish. This was the worst era for this Brand.
And here I was, thinking Bugatti was italian…
My whole life has been a lie. :p
The man that created Bugatti was a native Italian, but the brand is French, now owned by Germans. Great mix ! :P
Very nice article indeed!!! 1,5 year ago I bought my 1st car, a 2006 Peugeot 206 1,4 N/A 75hp with 128k km and today at 150k km I still love it!! It might not have the power, but the handling and the feeling is just too good for this kind of car. I bought a french car by sheer luck (it had a discount the day I went to the dealership), and I cant be more thankfull for it. Thank you French for the cars you make!! Greetings from Greece..!
I mean, they arent that bad. Our C1 is really really nice to drive. When driving normal its really quiet inside there, and you have a lot of space( even in the back) and the 69 hp do their job in the city(when there arent many people in there) . Now to our Berlingo. We’ve got the 85 HP Version, and it does what you need it to. It has now got around 87000 kms(about 52-53000? miles) and we only had to change 1 light bulb in that time. The C3 Pluriel meanwhile is just so boring… The automatic needs years(really, years, you could lap the ‘Ring in that time) to shift, and when its hot, the sensor for the automatic clutch just doesnt work sometimes(so you can’t drive…) and earlier on, when it was new the bulbs broke every month… But other than that, french cars are pretty nice. :)
The C3 Pluriel was sadly a rubbish car with good intentions. Designed like a modern "2CV Charleston" and supposedly fun like a Mehari. But it was just a boring little car :(
Sorry mate. The C1 is a Toyota.
I have only ever driven Peugeots in my life so I cannot offer much of a comparison (one exception: a Golf in driving school), but I can say that they are still fun and one can also grow to love them :)
French diesels are great engines for reliability. A little bit behind German diesels though.
I see more German diesel with problems than French ones. But that may be just a rare case :0
Pagination