MenuClose
In This Article
Category: Classics
Make: Citroen
Model: Cx

Pierre Tissier probably thought he'd seen it all in the 10 years since he set up shop as a coachbuilder specializing in six- and eight-wheel Citroen automobile conversions. After all, his motto, "Nun Quam Ut Ceteri," loosely translates to "I'll do what others won't," and he'd converted plenty a Cit into vans, limousines, car haulers, and ambulances.

Then came the folks from La Culture De L'an 2000, an oddly-named agricultural equipment wholesaler looking to make a splash with a six-wheeled CX, a car that, nearly 40 years later, will head to auction.

Tissier made a name for himself in 1972 when a French car dealer wanted to build a high-speed car transporter to make deliveries to Spain. Tissier reasoned that a truck-based transporter would be too slow, so he cut a Citroen DS at its B-pillar and took advantage of the front-wheel-drive drivetrain to build a low loading platform aft of the truncated cabin. While he was at it, he added a couple more tag axles connected to the DS's hydropneumatic suspension system and mounted 10-inch wheels on the rear three axles to get the transporter as low as possible. While the resulting vehicle weighed two and a half tons, it was capable of a payload of one and a half tons.

After the success of his first conversion, Tissier founded Application des Procédés Tissier and used what he learned to first build a prototype six-wheeled DS-based newspaper delivery van, then transfered his knowledge of six- and eight-wheeled hydropneumatic suspension systems to the Citroen CX in 1974. More newspaper delivery vans followed, as did the aforementioned car haulers, ambulances, and limousines.

Notably, the ambulances used a fiberglass rear body section aft of the CX's rear doors that, according to John Reynolds's "Citroen: Daring to Be Different," allowed medics to work standing up. Tissier followed those with his 1980 Paris Motor Show vehicle, the Penthouse, which used a similar rear body section reconfigured as a camper and fitted with an accordion-like pop-up hatch.

Executives at La Culture De L'an 2000 thus knew what Tissier was capable of when they approached him in 1982 asking for a company vehicle. As one of the last of the big Citroens, the CX was often pressed into executive service, and Citroen even offered a long-wheelbase variant called the Prestige. But that's not what the folks from La Culture wanted. Instead, they wanted, essentially, a rolling billboard, and one that could demonstrate their products no less.

And they wanted American semi-truck-style exhaust stacks.

Tissier thus took a CX, chassis number HS878294, converted it to a six-wheeler, and installed a camper/ambulance-style fiberglass body. Into the body sides he recessed the stacks - one on either side - and cut a unique window configuration.

Then, atop the body, Tissier added a pair of boxes designed specifically to house the wings of an ultralight/microlight that La Culture hauled around specifically to demonstrate how such an aircraft could be used to apply fertilizers.

Yes, it was a niche within a niche within a niche, which was what Tissier excelled at.

However successful the idea of microlight-applied fertilizer was, La Culture De L'an 2000 closed its doors in 1992 and sold off the Tissier-bodied CX as part of its bankruptcy proceedings. A subsequent owner removed the unique microlight rack and converted the CX into a motorhome with a small stove and sink.

According to Artcurial, which will offer the CX at its Automobiles Sur Les Champs auction, the vehicle "now deserves a restoration." The pre-auction estimate for the CX, which will sell at no reserve, ranges from €10,000 to €15,000 (about $11,000 to $16,500).

The Automobiles Sur Les Champs auction will take place October 27 in Paris. For more information, visit Artcurial.com.

UPDATE (4.November): Thanks to Jean-Pierre Dionnet, we now know what this vehicle looked like in its original configuration:

We also know that it sold for €9,536, or about $10,600.

Recent
Memories From A Valet Parking Lot Attendant In The Late 1970s
Photo: Provided By Author

I turned 18 in late 1977. Ordinarily it would have been just another birthday, especially considering I had my driver’s license less than a year, but it was significant in that I was hired as a valet parking attendant at The Manor, a well-known fine dining restaurant and caterer - that doubled as a very popular wedding venue - located in West Orange, New Jersey. It also meant I could leave behind yard work, dog care, and the sporadic odd jobs of scooping ice cream and delivering newspapers.

The Manor sat on an extensive mountainside property adjacent to a wooded reservation and a golf course, so it was a great place to work outside in the fresh air. Visitors entered the property through tall gates and navigated a tree-lined driveway that led to the grand entrance of the pillared Georgian mansion. Valet parking was free and not required. If visitors opted for valet service, vehicles were driven from the main entrance to either an upper or lower lot. The farthest parking spaces were more than a quarter mile away from The Manor’s front door.

Keep reading...Show Less
Pontiac’s Nearly Forgotten, Bred-For-NASCAR, 1956 Dual Four-Barrel Setup
Photo by Matthew Litwin

Americans rediscovered factory performance thanks, in part, to NASCAR’s first official Strictly Stock (quickly renamed Grand National) race, held on June 19, 1949, on Charlotte Speedway’s ¾-mile dirt oval. What made the 200-lap contest compelling to the 13,000 attendees was a relatable starting field of 33 factory-stock cars (with minor provisions allowed for safety). Of the nine makes that took the green flag (Buick, Cadillac, Chrysler, Ford, Hudson, Kaiser, Lincoln, Mercury, and Oldsmobile), Jim Roper and his 1949 Lincoln were declared victors following the disqualification of Glenn Dunnaway and his 1947 Ford, the latter’s rear spring having been modified for its day-to-day life as a moonshine hauler.

By the end of the 1955 season, Buick, Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Chrysler, Dodge, Plymouth, Ford, Mercury, Hudson, Nash, Studebaker, and even Jaguar, had been added to the list of race-winning manufactures. Absent was Pontiac, though not for a lack of effort. Thirteen drivers had entered Pontiacs, a combined total of just 25 races. Freddie Lee provided the best result, a fourth, at Carrell Speedway in Gardena, California, on June 30, 1951.

Keep reading...Show Less

Trending