1982 Citroen Brochure - Visa, GSA, CX
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- Опубліковано 5 лют 2025
- I take a break from tinkering to show you through one of the many brochures sent my way by kind viewers. This one dates from 1982 and covers three models from the range - the Visa, GSA and CX.
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I loved my Citroen visa 650 special 1983 model. It was my first car after passing my driving test in 1993. In 10yesrs it only had 3 major faults 1 french alternator 2 gearbox select lever snapped off in top of gearbox it has a roll pin in there where it broke. Headlamp switch dip/mainbeam failed it melted and bonus was the heater was not very warm in rain if you ran through a deep puddle it would steam up inside. It did have some major repairs to inner sills and sill ends where the rear suspension mount bolts come through floor under rear seat the car body split/tore and I had to weld a plate over it. Other wise as a car it was great slow till you got it up to speed.
Great to see a nice brochure in such good condition. Good work hub nut
I remember as a teenager, I used to spend my time after school walking around all of the car dealerships collecting brochures. Citroen was the one I always used to look forward to getting. I can remember that very brochure and also I remember the 2cv6 brochures featuring TinTin. I think that came a few years later. Happy memories and clearly the reason I have a quirky love for French cars.
Yes, I had those 2CV6 brochures, mostly from the mid '80s on. I probably do still have them somewhere, in the many, many boxes of old car magazines that largely fill the garage and various other rooms of the house. I also have mid '80s Coleman-Milne brochures, which are really quite impressive...
Me too. Fiat was one of the best, quality brochures and sometimes freebies like pens, badges, key rings . . . and even balloons!
My dad had a blue GS Pallas auto, very soft and comfy seats. My sister`s boyfriend back in the 80s scraped his mum`s red Visa while reversing out of the garage. He was in a panic and I helped remove the front wing and push out the dent and my sister got some matching paint from our local garage, managed to patch it up and was ages before his mum though something was odd. Fun times!
Great video and a nice bit of history. Thank you. Take care.
This is like an episode of twin cam
Only no where as good.
No he just copied twin cams idea
Those were the days when you got every model in the range in one brochure.👍 I remember getting a Citroen brochure in the 70s from a school friend and I was liking the CX the most with its futuristic styling. Your partner got good taste wanting a CX. Maybe you could buy her one when she pass her test.
I have a French brochure of the '69 Citroen lineup, with the 2CV, Dyane, Ami 6, DS, my favourites :) Although it only has standard side/front/rear view pictures, and a few from the interiors, not much fantasy went into the photography...
I understand Ms. Hubnut's fancy for a CX, as my dad also had a metallic pistachio green CX Break, with the chrome bumpers/hubcaps, and the rotating dials, with brown interior. It was a frickin' spaceship, and was a joy to look at and ride in. The raising of the suspension on startup is the coolest party trick ever on a car... :)
The ami6 is the most exciting
Wonderful nostalgia thanks Hub Nut greetings from Scotland 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
Loved that, there has never been anything quite like that CX Familiale. A friend had one he used to use for a touring band. 8 people on board and a huge trailer behind no problem.
I'm glad you liked the broucher I sent you as a gift made a great video
I enjoyed that, it makes me want to try and find my collection of car brochures from the 1982 NEC Motor Show. My much-missed Renault 16 was another car you could drive with a puncture (this happened several times until the problem was found - a rusty rim puncturing the inner tube) and similarly, I remember the owner of the village garage saying how much the 16s just blew away the British competition of the day - noteworthy to him were the 5-bearing crankshaft ("you could play a tune on a Mini engine by comparison quite quickly" he said) but particularly praiseworthy in his mind was the brake compensation at the rear.
I had this brochure when it first came out! The Citroen Dealership was not far from where I worked and as I knew the sales team (customers of the place I worked) and had just gained my Dyane (still had a prov licence at that time) one of them tried to tempt me into a Visa. I kept the Dyane until I got my first GS. Swapped that after 6 months for a CX.... Happy Chevron Days when cars were fun, not clinical... Nice one Ian, thanks for the trip down memory lane.
Love a good brochure run thru, more please.
Great video Ian. I really really enjoyed it. Like yourself I am a facts and figures geek. Thank for sharing your passion with me. Pete 🇬🇧
Great video, found it very interesting. Thanks
My Dad had an early GSA which I drove a lot and my first brand new car was a Visa. Happy days!
Different, but great video!
Love to see different brochures, because i have collected quite a lot (hundreds) of different brochures of, cars, trucks and tractors.
I think older brochures are art, lots of beautiful photos.
Would be nice to see more of these.
Thanks for sharing brought back fond memories of when my town had a Citroen dealership. Has a teenager me and my friend would be always going in mithering the staff for brochures or promo stuff use to come away with bags of stuff like we had being to a motor show. Remember the launch of the Citroen XM and being blown away how it looked so modern and like nothing we ever seen before like a car from the future. Where are all the early XM's
I love this brochure. My grandfather only drove DS Citroens. He has had more than 10 as daily drivers. He was simply astonished by the comfort.
And yes, he had a CX too which he liked very much. I miss him a lot.
Thank you for this.
Edit: please don’t sell the Oltcit and neither the Yugo. When you called the Visa beige from the brochure I had a good laugh. Isn’t it really turd brown? Haha
Very nice brochure. I remember reading my manual in the early nineties to discover the econoscope.
I thought for a horrible minute that was a can of lager and an ashtray sitting on the back of TWC lol 🤣🤣😂🤣😂🤣!!!!!
I used to have this brochure - the photos showing the mad dashboards for the Visa, GSA and CX were awesome, as were the CX GTi mk1 pics (still on my ultimate car wish list!)
Fascinating read! And thanks for the close-ups of TWC, who is looking decidedly poxy.
Really wonderful brochure, brings back good memories of our old Visa 11RE.
I see Citroen are finally trying to cash-in on their heritage in their latest TV ad, with cameos by the 2CV, GS, Ami 6 (and doubtless other models), and promoting the absorbent ride of the new C4. About time too, really - my body is sick of being jarred and jolted, and I'm honestly surprised I didn't burst a tyre, twice, on deep, sharp-edged potholes on a journey on the A1 yesterday.
I never knew that about the Citroen badge or about the power of the CX exhaust :) . Most enlightening
Enjoyable as always, and informative. Really looking forward to material on the Nissan Primera 😀😀😀
Really enjoyed this video Ian.
I do love an old brochure and that was very comprehensive both in content and your presentation of it, especially when you corrected a manufacturers claim👍
Interesting how a W123 is often used as a bench mark to compare similar models. Pity they never mention comparative survival rates. Other models may have had more advanced technologies but they weren't in the same league for longivity.
Got my copy of that at a tiny car show at the Spalding tulip hall. Bizarrely they also had a selection of skoda Estelles parked right next to a fleet of Porsche models. The staff seems fine letting my 12 yr old self sit in a 911 and I remember how heavy the clutch was!! They also let me grab armfuls of brochures - which I’ve still got - fab
Having googled the Citroën Belphégor I see that it had a face that only a mother could love, I do enjoy looking through old car literature although it does make me realise how old I am now haha!!
A funny truck where you could see through the plexiglas panel under the headlights what brand and type of oil the owner used, Total 15W40 most of the time.
Wow, I had this brochure when I was a kid ! In fact I ve still got it in the loft !
Will be excellent to see you rust proofing the gsa as it’s super important. I’m doing my bikes soon
Very interesting thank you...as a previous owner of a GSA Pallas and a member of the COC...imagine my excitement tripping over a GSA Club Estate in San Pedro Alacantra Spain in quite remarkable condition a year ago....the owner had it from new and uses it every day...
Another good one Ian, I remember wandering around loads of dealerships in 1968 collecting brochures for a school project. Got loads of good Ford and Mercedes ones but after I'd handed them in I never did get them back.😖
We had to do boring stuff like Shakespeare.
@@caw25sha I bloody hate Shakespeare! 😂
Miss Hubnut really should obtain a CX Loadrunner.
I miss good old fashion car brochures.
Bout 88 i worked for Citroen for a bit , remember cleaning a visa in a baby blue colour.........and cleaning the show room , there was cx's in there ...........
Its now a carpet selling shop place
You should be tidying and organising!
i used to have bx,s and i loved them.
I can attest to the quality of the 1980s Michelin tires; my new 1984 Accord had MXL series tires, which, to my surprise, were said to be good for 80,000 miles...this turned out to be about right; I changed them out about the same time I had the shock-struts replaced, somewhere about 78,000 miles. They were also surprisingly good in the snow!
Lovely brochure, takes me back to the days when we still had municipal golf courses.
I loved the satellite switches so much I bought a set to use on a kit car that never got used and ended up selling them to someone in the US, which surprised me as I didn't think the Visa was sold in the US?
It wasn't, but it's amazing where these cars end up.
@@HubNut Interesting, thanks Ian.
I honestly think you should humour Ms Hubnut and get a CX...
So do I!
I owned an "A" plate LNA back in the early 1990's a "X" plate 2 pot Visa a few years later. I also learned to drive on my father's "S" plate GS. He also had a 2 pot Visa and. "B" plate BX over the years. He wanted an XM but couldn't find one in his price range so went for a Proton Aeroback which lasted him until he died in 2003.
Fantastic to see & listen to the history of 3 of Citroen's most interesting car's of the 80's.
Fantastic 😄
TwinCam just fell off his chair.
Always loved car brochures, BMW made some beautiful ones back in the 70's, I had all the block colour VW ones from our local dealer. Begging letters scored me Ferrari 365 boxer, lancia Stratos and Lamborghini Espada and Silouette. Such a shame a lot of companies have gone to e brochures.
Brilliant video Ian
If you are stuck for jobs you could clean the oil off TWC's engine then you will be able to see where the leaks are rather than wait until it is peeing out.
Really interesting, thanks.
Ive got that one! 😂 Got it at the Scottish Motor Show at Kelvin Hall 🏴😊🚗🇫🇷
Miss the Scottish Motor Show, was good when I went to the SECC
I seem to remember that Toyota had the best quality plastic bags for carrying the weight of all the brochures I would collect there 😂 Yip, miss the car show in Glasgow ☹️
Great video !
I have a question regarding car brochures in general, years ago there was a separate colour and trim brochure for a buyer to choose from, around what year did that become part of the main car brochure ? I have a few classic brochures and there is no mention of colour choices. Thanks
A choice score for me was the Mazda Cosmo rotary sports car when released in Australia.
Holden Hurricane a good one too.
Even the XY Ford Falcon one is now wanted.
As was a Falcon XY GT HO selling for over $1.1 million the other day.
Really enjoyed this video, I am in the process of filming a brochure review for my channel not as exciting as the Citroen brochures through...
After seeing an Xantia Parked in the street the other day which Just happened to be the Last remaining Xantia Td Dimension That's is left on the roads of the uk, On an M Plate 1994.
One thing that stands out to be about Citroens Above all the other manufacturers of the time and that is how daring they where to be Quite Different, And that's like all these in this wonderful Brochure you have too. I can see why People Just love Old Citroens. They are cool on another level.
Sadly I feel modern Citroens Seem all too Normal these days and dont have that Citroen Quirkiness Of old.
Hi Ian, very informative video and made a bit of a chance, to the normal video, good to just step back of a chance and do something different.
Interesting how some simple and some even quite old fashioned cars for the time had something of an Indian Summer of production years after production might have otherwise ended. They were often marketed as low budget alternatives to replacement models that had superseded them years previously. The Citroen 2CV, Renault 4, Morris Minor, BL Mini, BL Maestro, the original VW Beetle and the Ford Pop 103E come to mind.
That was excellent.
5:46 to 6:05 That is correct. A very safe and practical steering and suspension design. It would be a roll-over if the same thing happens driving a new BMW Five-Series with a caravan.
The 1218cc suitcase engine was also in the Renault 14 and Talbot Samba
The 1124 cc engine used in the visa and 205 was also used in the 106 and saxo! It's a great revvy engine which sounds awesome.
Not quite. The suitcase engines were replaced by the TU engines, which were quite difference and also used in later BXs, the 106, Saxo and Xsara.
HubNut ah I see! I assumed it was a TU engine when you mentioned the 1124cc displacement. Never knew about the suitcase engine, I will have to look into this more! Thanks for the facts 🙂
82 when 2CVs got disc brakes and round lamps in the uk and I got my new special VEL649X which I believe is still on the road somewhere
Currently on a SORN, MOT until August.
Forgot the link:
vehicleenquiry.service.gov.uk
Thanks - must be a winter thing as it was on the road last summer which I was pleased to see
@@waynetetley584 A few people round my way have "summer" cars. For example one guy has a Midget in lovely condition which he only drives in the summer but he seems to be always tinkering with it all year round.
Oh. I do miss these car brochures . They were a car bible for buyers . Now they are a nostalgia trip for us all. I don’t think any manufacturers produce them any more ?
I think they just produce pdfs now. In the past an area of forest the size of Wales was cut down every second just to produce Citroen brochures.
Very interesting as usual. 👌
Very informative.
Historical trivia: whilst Citroen and Lancia both like to claim a first for using unitary construction, Lagonda was there before them both with the 11.1hp in 1913 (and no doubt someone will come up with an even earlier example - it's always dodgy to claim a first!)
Truck Trivia: The Commer Commando was available in the UK with a 318ci PETROL Chrysler V8 when it first launched in 1976.
Didn't know they sold them here. Found one in New Zealand with the petrol V8. Economy must have been terrifying!
At that point in time, and for most of the '80s, the 2CV merited its' own brochure in the UK...
Wow, not an advocate of detailing content, but you really do need to give Twc's body work some love....🙂
Yes. On her clipboard! Can't leave it.
@@HubNut I forgot you were accountable now.
I had a Dyane then a GSA loved both
I had that same exact one!
Up until 2007 i drove rovers then i changed to Citroën absolutely love them but sofar the best one ive driven is the one i have now the c3 piccasso 1.6 vtr plus diesel lots of grunt and i do lve the turbo whistle
I would like to see a top speed test on a disused runway with all the running cars and see which gets to the nearest manufacturers claimed top speed.
I bet the citreon gsa would win and get the nearest.
Would make a great video.
There is currently a CX Gti turbo series on ebay.
I think the Belphegor is a very nice truck. There's even a Belphegor bus.
Hub Cam
The Lna didn't arrive in the UK until the autumn 1983 for the 1984 model year - the earliest cars came on A plates. Square lamps on the 2cv were deleted in the Uk with introduction of the disc braked Special at the start of 82.
No, I've definitely seen LNAs on Y plates, but that still fits 1983. Disc brake register in the 2CV Club covers 1981 to 1990.
Is it TwinCam inspired good UA-cam channel
I'm sure I read somewhere that during WW2, Citroen assembled trucks for the Germans, Pierre Boulanger decided to make the assembly line go as slowly as they could get away with, and ensured that the engine oil dipsticks were incorrectly marked to make the engines ran short on oil and failed prematurely.
Interesting and enjoyable 👍seems a long time ago now 1982 and I supposed it is Lol
Scarily it is almosr 40 years. Or to put it another way, closer to WW 2 than to today...
I appreciate this is not a Citroen but the last truck we had from Renault was an R 310 back in 1983 I think,
Cab design also used by Ford.
Barrerios is the Spanish truck you're trying to remember. Was sold in UK as a Dodge
Did one of these cars have a fibreglass boot?
No. The BX had a plastic tailgate, and some models also had a plastic bonnet.
What car enthusiast did that in his younger years, browse car brochures and dream.
Great cars the newer cars. Are mostly plastic I am a fan of older cars all around good and easy cars to work on
Wasn't 1982 the year the BX came out or was that 83?
Yes, 1982, but 1983 in the UK.
I miss my Citroen Visa 652cc.
Wasn't the beige GSA marketed as Tobacco??
I don't think so. Rover certainly had a Tobacco Leaf beige.
They did a Visa GTI didn't they. Now that was a little beast wasn't it.
My old VW T4 1.9td only has 69bhp but never bogeyed me lol
I got the impression that in latter years Citroen stopped marketing and promoting the 2CV. Renault did the same with the R4.
My mum bought new a 1986 Visa
The 2CV didn't need a brochure to drum up sales. It sold itself.
The 2.5 diesel was also seen in the Ford Granada
Not this one I don't think. If I recall correctly, this was Citroen's own diesel engine.
I very clearly remember reading that very brochure and trying to persuade my then fiance (never to develop into wife, long story. Don't go there) that we should get a GSA. She liked the idea until we got to the dealer and she saw the control layout. She had learnt to drive in a Fiesta (ywan) so the GSA was way to out there for her. Oh well, life goes on.
Just remembered, the ex fiance married a man who drove a Marina 1800. Hmmm? Maybe there was something in that after all.
Asked about the brochure of the latest model to replace my three year old car.
Answer was no more brochures. All now on the makers local web site.
So brochures an endangered species.
A little bit more incentive to buy the new model as well as doing less than 2000km in the year with Covid restrictions on travel.
That was both an enjoyable and interesting read. Would definitely like more of those.👍
How I wish I had purchased a GS instead of a Maxi ?... or am I wearing my rose tinted spectacles again ?
@M Bacon someone described to me the Maxi gearbox.. the cable one , was like stirring a bucket of porridge with a wooden spoon...The two I had were the later rod change versions.A 1500 and a 1750 HL in blue... that was a nice car
I had a 1977 W123 300D Auto it might have only had 88bhp but it was very wafty
The double chevron was not so much developed for strenght but rather for it's LACK of whining noise.
In fact straight cut gears are stronger, that is why you find them in race- and rally cars.
Lancia Lambda with monocoque construction, independent front suspension and V4 engine really was the first modern car - in 1922! Incidentally, if you pronounce LN and LNA the French way you get Helene and Helena.
@M Bacon Yes and ID = idee, idea. CX was obvious but, in English, BX could be subject to misinterpretation!
Toyota MR2