RE: Citroen C2 Loeb | Shed of the Week

RE: Citroen C2 Loeb | Shed of the Week

Friday 24th January 2020

Citroen C2 Loeb | Shed of the Week

The limited edition Loeb couldn't lay a claim to its namesake's genius - but it does make for good Shed...



Shed has owned a few Citroens in his time. He tried owning them in someone else's time, but that didn't go so well. The highlights of his Cit list were a GS picked up for a chanson when dealers couldn't get them off their forecourts fast enough, and not one but two 2CVs on the grounds that the second one couldn't possibly be any worse than the first one. He was wrong there.

All Shed's Citroens were bittersweet ownership experiences. Like a Land Rover Defender, they were horrible cars by any objective measure, but there was something about them that made you want them. A bit like Mrs Shed, only with a lot more want.

The C2 of 2003 was Citroen's attempt to tap into the 'look at me, I've got big wheelarches and stuff' market that had been ignited a few years previously by back-street customisers and certain auto-jazz mags. It was designed by Donato Coco, who also penned the C3, C4, Xsara and the 430 Scuderia, California, 599XX and 458 Italia when he was moonlighting from his design headship at Lada. No, not really, though it is true that he was recruited by Dany Bahar in 2009 to sort out Lotus's styling.


As you will see from the plaque, this C2 by Loeb is number 30 of 310 released in 2007 to commemorate the mega-talented Belgian's return to the Citroen works rally team. The C4 was the weapon of choice back then, so a mix of 180hp 2.0 petrols and 108hp 1.6 HDi diesels. Shame they didn't extend that diesel option to the C2, because the non-Loeb C2 1.6 HDi VTS was a good little car happy to be mercilessly thrashed to get you around the place in a reasonably timely manner. On the road the £30-a-year-to-tax diesel didn't feel that much slower than the 121hp VTS petrol and was quite a bit better on running costs. You'll struggle to find a good one of them in the UK though, and as noted you'll never find one with all these spangly Seb Loeb trankliments all over it.

The C2 by Loeb was £9,995 in 2007. This particular example looks very clean indeed for a near-100,000-miler and is now on offer for £1,495. It's just whistled through another MOT test and there's no mention of corrosion on any of the previous tickets.


C2 electrics can be a bit ditzy (mind the fob alarm), the fuel consumption won't be that great - mid 30s, probably - and the rattly interior tells you that the C2 is at heart a cheap runabout. But the seats are good, the instrumentation layout will get your juices flowing, and most Joes would consider red to be the C2's best colour. Peculiarly, the 16-valve 1.6 petrol engine in our shed struggled to deliver the sort of performance you felt you was much more easily available in an 8-valve Saxo. The C2 VTS's power to weight ratio was 114bhp per tonne, its maximum power didn't arrive until 6,500rpm, and it needed two changes to get to 60mph, knocking its times back to something in the mid-eights.

However it did have one over on the sporty Clios that were recognised to be a superior drive - namely its lack of dephaser, a system that can put a cheap Clio into an early grave. Plus you'd like to think that the C2's 100kg extra heft over the Saxo would give it a bit more impact resistance than a damp crisp packet. Handling-wise it was a bit understeery and lacking in wheel feel, but the ride quality was decent on faster roads and the grip good. Think of the C2 VTS as a warm rather than a hot hatch, try to forget that Swift Sports or Fiesta STs ever existed, and your expectations will be set at about the right level.

Returning for a moment to the 2CVs, Mrs Shed was extremely scathing when she heard the second one puttering into Shed's yard, but when it was sold a couple of years later Shed could have sworn that he saw a tear in her eye. Of course that could just have been the flame on his thermic lance glinting off her glass eye.


Click here for the original ad


Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

54 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
Bloody hell! Was Shed on his way home from the pub when he posted this?
Anyhoo, not sure whose box this will tick. Lightweight (meaning broken femur in an accident) French tepid hatch. An oddball when released - a 30+ skaterboi where I worked at the time had one.
A shed? No, but maybe a chicken coop if you sell the engine and interior.

A1VDY

3,575 posts

127 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
It's not bad at all.
A small hatch in what looks like very nice condition and not overly priced.
Buy it, shove it away for a few years and wouldn't be surprised if this little cars value shoots up.

Tyre Smoke

23,018 posts

261 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
I said (mainly to myself, admittedly) that warmish C2s would be a collectable in years to come.

This looks like a steal.

mnx42

215 posts

163 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
Had a normal vts one of these before my SSS. It was ok on the roads, ok full consumption (I got low 40’s on a run) and was nice enough inside.
But the ride was harsh and the rattles!... oh the rattles from everywhere inside we’re awful.
Not a bad car for the money but not again for me thank you.

MJK 24

5,648 posts

236 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
Great little car IMO.

GTEYE

2,096 posts

210 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
I could never get past the side profile which looked like a really bad cut and shut of 2 different cars.

LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

196 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
GTEYE said:
I could never get past the side profile which looked like a really bad cut and shut of 2 different cars.
This! There's got to be a reason why car designers try to get two different window lines to look good but it never works?!

Edited by LaurasOtherHalf on Friday 24th January 07:59

Turbobanana

6,271 posts

201 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
Zygot said:
Lightweight (meaning broken femur in an accident) French tepid hatch.
I saw the lead picture. I wondered "how long will it be before someone chimes in with the predictable 'lightweight French car with the build quality of a cardboard box, unsafe in an accident blah blah blah'": we didn't have to wait long, did we?

phil y

548 posts

122 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
NCAP rating was reasonably good for it’s time.

https://www.euroncap.com/en/results/citroën/c...

sjabrown

1,916 posts

160 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
C2s don't hold up too well to regular 'spirited' driving. Rear suspension is quite prone to bending!
And they do feel heavy but that's to be expected being a generation on from the 106/Saxo.

Augustus Windsock

3,369 posts

155 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
“..and as noted you'll never find one with all these spangly Seb Loeb trankliments all over it”

Trinkliments? I thought you’d come over all ‘Stanley Unwin’
A bit like
“Goldyloppers trittly-how in the early mordy, and she falolloped down the steps. Oh unfortunade for cracking of the eggers and the sheebs and the buttery full-falollop and graze the knee-clappers. So she had a Vaselubrious, rub it on and a quick healy huff and that was that”
Sorry, but I’m one of those that thinks the Loeb name on this is as appropriate as Schumachers on a Sciecento.
Slip-slidy most in the wetty-grippers! Deep joy!

Mr.Jimbo

2,082 posts

183 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
How long has Loeb been from Belgium then?

Someone ought to tell him.

A mate of mine had one of these back in the day, compared to my 106 Rallye it did seem a bit lardy but the engine is a peach that loves to rev. I thought it looked better on the white wheels that (I thought) came as standard though. I don't remember that interior either, it seemed more upmarket at the time but then that was over 10 years ago now frown Must take my rose tinted specs off!

trails

3,713 posts

149 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
learn something new everyday; for years I believe Loeb was French...

AlexIT

1,491 posts

138 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
[quote]commemorate the mega-talented Belgian's return to the Citroen works rally team
[/quote]

Loeb....
Belgian...
confusedconfusedredcard


NGRhodes

1,291 posts

72 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
mnx42 said:
Had a normal vts one of these before my SSS. It was ok on the roads, ok full consumption (I got low 40’s on a run) and was nice enough inside.
But the ride was harsh and the rattles!... oh the rattles from everywhere inside we’re awful.
Not a bad car for the money but not again for me thank you.
And when the rattle stops you know the rattly bit broke !

beerexpressman

240 posts

137 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
[quote=Augustus Windsock]“..and as noted you'll never find one with all these spangly Seb Loeb trankliments all over it”

Trinkliments? I thought you’d come over all ‘Stanley Unwin’


"Tranklements" is still regularly used in the black country by the older generation...meaning bits and bobs / trinkets

K50 DEL

9,237 posts

228 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
AlexIT said:
Loeb....
Belgian...
confusedconfusedredcard
He's only a 9 times World champion...... why would you expect a motoring forum to know such minor details as where the man comes from. Dear God.furious

Richard-390a0

2,257 posts

91 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
I feel I should like this, but I don't...

Turbobanana

6,271 posts

201 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
K50 DEL said:
AlexIT said:
Loeb....
Belgian...
confusedconfusedredcard
He's only a 9 times World champion...... why would you expect a motoring forum to know such minor details as where the man comes from. Dear God.furious
The forum knows: it's the professional journalist who researches and writes for a living that got it wrong...

alorotom

11,941 posts

187 months

Friday 24th January 2020
quotequote all
I had a VTS version as a courtesy car back when my SportKa was being written off for vandalism and I was excited to get the keys to it. It massively disappointed though and what really shocked me was how dire the fuel consumption was, it was in the high teens/low 20s around town and with a bit of buzzing up and down A roads.

I couldnt bring myself to part with £500 for this let alone what theyre asking for this "edition"