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2 CV Prototypes - TPV - Très Petite Voiture (Very Small Car)

Whereas most of Citroën's prototypes have been shrouded in mystery, the company has actually been fairly open about the development of the 2CV.

Pierre-Jules Boulanger, an architect by profession, ran Citroën after the company was acquired by Michelin, initially along with Pierre Michelin and Robert Puiseux and after the former's death in a car crash in 1937 he ran the company until 1950.

He was the man responsible for the concept of the TPV - it is said that he realised the need while observing local farmers who used horses and carts and bicycles in order to get their produce to market. He envisaged a cheap, minimalistic, low maintenance solution in which all extraneous and unnecessary components were to be deleted.

He was also an astute business man who realised that when Citroën ceased production of the 5CV in 1926, the company had left the bottom end of the marketplace to its rivals, Peugeot and Simca.

In 1934, just before Michelin acquired the company, Pierre Michelin instructed his engineers to build a tyre-testing vehicle on which certain automotive experiments might be undertaken.

The basic architecture of the TPV (Très Petite Voiture or small car) was determined quite early - flat twin engine, interconnected suspension - 4 roues sous une parapluie (four wheels under an umbrella) and while the surviving cars share no parts in common with the vehicle that went into production, the basic silhouette already existed, together with the use of corrugated metal to achieve the necessary rigidity for very lightweight body panels.

In the run up to WW2, 250 cars were built and apparently all but two were destroyed when the Nazis invaded France.

It is likely that the Germans captured one of the 1939 prototypes when they occuped the remains of the Levallois factory with its TPV production line. The car was sent to Wolfsburg where an unimpressed Dr Porsche pronounced that it was "...more a soapbox jalopy than a people's car..."

For over half a century, it was believed that the only survivors were this car that has been displayed at shows over the years plus the pick up used for tyre testing.

Both water and air cooling for the engine were investigated.

The water-cooled, horizontally opposed, two cylinder engine was of 700 cm3 capacity and was capable of propelling the car to 'almost 60 kph' (37 mph) thanks to its low weight of only 370 kg.