2CV
The Citroën 2CV, produced from 1948 to 1990, represents one of the most iconic economy cars in automotive history with a production run spanning 42 years. Conceived by Citroën Vice-President Pierre Boulanger in the 1930s to motorize French farmers still using horses and carts, the 2CV combined innovative engineering with straightforward, utilitarian bodywork. The original 1948 Type A featured a 375 cc air-cooled flat-twin engine producing just 9 hp with a top speed of 64 km/h (40 mph) and 0-40 km/h acceleration in 42.4 seconds. Over its production life, the 2CV evolved significantly: top speed increased to 80 km/h in 1955, 84 km/h in 1962, 100 km/h in 1970, and finally 115 km/h by 1981 as engine displacement and power increased.
During its extraordinary 42-year production run, 3,872,583 2CVs were manufactured along with 1,246,306 Fourgonnettes (delivery vans), establishing the model as a cultural icon representing affordable, practical transportation. Production initially centered at the Levallois-Perret factory in France for 40 years before ending in 1988, with final production continuing at the more modern Mangualde plant in Portugal until July 27, 1990. The 2CV minimalist design, remarkable reliability, simple maintenance, and classless appeal made it beloved across generations and social classes, cementing its status as one of the most influential cars of the 20th century.