Citroën Visa Explained

Citroën Visa
Manufacturer:Citroën
Aka:Wuling LZW 7100/ Wuling Visa (PRC)[1]
Production:1978–1988
1991–1994 (China)
Class:Supermini (B)
Layout:FF layout
F4 layout
Body Style:5-door hatchback
4-door cabriolet
Predecessor:Citroën Ami
Citroën Dyane
Successor:Citroën AX
Wheelbase:2436NaN
Length:36901NaN1
Width:15301NaN1
Height:14101NaN1
Weight:8700NaN0
Related:Citroën C15
Karenjy Visa (RM)[2]
Citroën LN
Peugeot 104
Talbot Samba
Citroën Axel / Oltcit Club

The Citroën Visa is a five-door, front-engine, front wheel drive supermini manufactured and marketed by Citroën from 1978 to 1988 in gasoline and diesel variants. 1,254,390 examples were ultimately manufactured over a single generation, with a single facelift (1981). China has also assembled the car as the Liuzhou Wuling LZW 7100 minicar. Production started in 1991 and finished in 1994.

Citroën commissioned Heuliez to produce a Visa convertible variant, marketed as the Décapotable (1984), and a box van variant (1985 - 2005) was marketed as the Citroën C15. A sedan variant was prototyped but never manufactured.

Development

In 1965 Robert Opron began working on the Citroën G-mini prototype and project EN101, a replacement for the 2CV using its flat twin engine and intended to launch in 1970. The advanced space efficient designs with compact exterior dimensions and an aerodynamic drag co-efficient Cd of 0.32, were never fully developed because of negative feedback from potential clients.[3]

A subsequent program, the Citroën Prototype Y, was developed in the early 1970s in co-operation with Fiat, to replace the 2CV-based Citroën Ami - using lessons from the Citroën G-mini and EN101 projects. Prototype Y used the Fiat 127 platform with the pioneering transverse front-engine, front wheel drive layout Fiat had test-marketed in the Autobianchi Primula.

When cooperation with Fiat ended, Citroën designed its own platform, and subsequent to the takeover of Citroën by Peugeot in the wake of the 1974 oil crisis, the renamed "Projet VD (Voiture Diminuée)" became the Citroën Visa, incorporating the floor pan of the Peugeot 104 and using the 104 engine, transmission (under the engine) and chassis.[4] The Visa thus became the first model under PSA Peugeot Citroën's platform-sharing policy.

In 1984, the original Citroën platform design from "Project Y" emerged as the Romanian Oltcit Club, using a Citroën Visa flat-twin engine and Citroën GS-based gearbox or the GS flat-four engine and gearbox. This was also marketed in Western Europe as the flat-four (only) Citroën Axel to recoup Citroën's Romanian investment, which the Romanian government could not repay. The resulting vehicle exhibited build quality issues, with 60,184 cars ultimately manufactured.

Model history and design

From its launch in September 1978,[5] the front-wheel drive Visa was available in "Spécial" and "Club" models with a mapped electronic ignition[6] (652 cc, 2-cylinder), and a "Super E" model (the 11RE after 1984), with the advanced Peugeot 1124  cc Douvrin engine / PSA X engine, a four-cylinder "Suitcase engine" - all aluminium alloy, chain driven overhead cam, with gearbox in the sump, sharing engine oil, mounted almost on its side.[6] The 1124 cc was as economical as the Citroën 2CV-derived twin, but with much better performance. The flat-twin engine was mounted longitudinally; the four-cylinder engines were installed transversally.[7] Later on it had 1219 cc (Super X) and then 954 cc (10E after 1984) and 1360 cc (1983 Visa GT and 14TRS after 1985) versions of the same engine. The original Visa's engines, while of Peugeot origins, were modified by Citroën's engineers with the aim of increasing fuel economy and responsiveness. The results were very limited and by the time of the introduction of the 1.4-liter models the engines were taken over wholesale from Peugeot without modifications.[7]

The Visa featured a soft but well-damped, long-travel, fully independent suspension (Coil-sprung MacPherson struts at the front, with coil sprung trailing arms at the rear) that contributed to a soft ride[8] similar to the Citroën 2CV, but with less extreme body roll.[9] New for 1983 was the Visa Super E GL, which offered more complete equipment and a redesigned, more comfortable two-piece rear seat. The two seats were easily removed (without requiring tools) to increase luggage capability.[10] For model year 1983 the most powerful Visa yet, the Visa GT, arrived. In addition to the 80-PS engine, it offered alloy wheels with Michelin TRX tires, spoilers, sideskirts and trim, special colors, and a more sporting suspension tuning than what was normal for Citroën.[11] In early 1985 the limited production Visa 14 S Tonic arrived, a version using the GT's engine and transmission coupled with an all-white appearance similar to the Visa Crono but at a price not much higher than the basic Visa 11 RE.[12] Only 2000 Tonics were made.[13]

In spring 1984 the diesel version was added. The Visa 17D and 17RD used the famously rugged and refined, class-leading 1769 cc XUD diesel and transmission from the Peugeot 205. The powertrain required too wide a track for the original engine compartment and wings, so the front wings were extended with large black plastic wheel arch panels. The spare wheel that in smaller petrol engine versions was mounted on top of the flat or near horizontal engine, was bolted to the otherwise flat boot floor, compromising luggage space. In continental Europe, a basic diesel van the 'Visa Enterprise' was sold that used the normal Visa bodyshell with the rear doors welded shut.[14] This version mounted a space saver spare wheel under the bonnet, atop the diesel engine.

At the Paris Salon 1984, for model year 1985, the 1.4 L TRS was presented.[15] The Visa 14 TRS, was produced for two years (1985–1987), shared its engine with the Citroën BX14 and receiving a favourable review by CAR magazine.[16] In early 1985 the Visa GTI, fitted with a 1580 cc engine, was introduced. This would be the fastest Visa offered with a top speed of 188 or 192 km/h depending on the engine version.

Between 1985 and 1987 the 1.1 litre petrol and 1.7 litre diesel "Leader" special editions were marketed.[14] Near the end of its production life, a 550NaN0 catalyzed version of the 1360 cc engine was added for markets with stricter emissions standards.[17]

No automatic gearbox version was produced.

Production of the Visa finished near the end of 1988, when the five-door version of the Citroën AX was launched.

Dashboard satellites and interior

The Visa driver controls were located in two pods flanking the steering wheel and were marketed as PRN Lunule (Satellites) (P=Pluie  - Rain, R=Route  - Road, N=Nuit  - Night). Controls for wipers, washers, horn, indicators, headlamps and flashers were mounted ergonomically on a cylindrical unit with heating and ventilation controls using laterally arcing sliders were located oppositely on a flat control pod - all within finger-tip reach.[6] In 1979 Popular Science described the system as using a "finger-tip control drum."[18]

In March 1981 the Visa received a facelift, designed by Heuliez, retaining the original interior and the "PRN Satellite" controls. It was now referred to as the Visa II. In the summer of 1984 (for the 1985 model year) the Visa was updated again and received a new dashboard, instruments, and switchgear, retaining its monospoke steering wheel. The turn signals were now self-cancelling, making this the first Citroën to be equipped with this near-universal feature.[19]

The curved sides of the Visa's windscreen enabled the use of a very large single wiper on the long narrow windscreen. The front of the revised car was designed to aerodynamically reduce the deposition of dirt on the headlights, and to reduce the risk of stone chips to the headlights, bonnet and windscreen.

The Visa's heating and ventilation system, (even though it used only a water control valve for temperature control and not air mixing), could provide cold air from fascia side vents to the face while warming the car.[20] The central directable fascia vents could be heated and angled, so that they could be pointed directly at the windscreen in front of the driver, to keep it clear in extreme misting conditions. There was also an additional mid level vent, to blow air between the front seats to the back of the car.[20]

The Visa's rear parcel shelf was in two hinged sections, one in the car, the other on the tailgate, to allow objects that were slightly too tall to still fit without removing the shelf. When carrying larger loads, the part of the shelf attached to the tailgate could be folded up, and fixed with the elasticated support strings, to protect the rear window and heated rear screen elements.[20]

Visa Décapotable

Citroën commissioned a four-door convertible Visa from Heuliez in 1984. Marketed as the Visa Décapotable, this was one of very few cabrio coaches built in the period: the bodywork features a hybrid fixed-profile convertible with the doors and window frames remaining intact. Based on the 11RE the convertible was heavier and slower than its hatchback counterpart and cost about 50 percent more; the markup was similar to what Fiat and Ford charged for their full convertible versions of the Ritmo and Escort.[21]

Engines

scope=col Engine Code scope=col Engine Typescope=col Cubic Capacity (cc)scope=col Maximum Powerscope=col Maximum Torque
scope=row V06/630, V06/644, V06/6652 cylinders (Boxer)65234.50NaN0 at 5250 rpm48Nm at 3500 rpm
scope=row XV84 cylinders954450NaN0 at 6000 rpm65Nm at 2750 rpm
scope=row XW71124500NaN0 at 5500 rpm83Nm at 2500 rpm
scope=row XZ5X1219640NaN0 at 6000 rpm91Nm at 3000 rpm
scope=row XY71360600NaN0 at 5000 rpm105Nm at 2500 rpm
scope=row XY8800NaN0 at 5800 rpm108Nm at 2800 rpm
scope=row XU5J15801150NaN0 at 6250 rpm131Nm at 4000 rpm
scope=row XUD74 cylinders diesel1769600NaN0 at 4600 rpm112Nm at 2000 rpm
[22]
Model
Range
EngineDisplacement
cc
FuellingPower/rpmTorque/rpmDriveStandard
Number
Manual
Gears
Kerb WeightSpeed
max
Acceler.
0–100 km/h
(0-62 mph) (seconds)
Consum.
(l/100 km)
Production
years
Cooling
Petrol Versions
Visa Special/Club/
Entreprise/base
V06652Carburetor34.50NaN0/525049Nm/3500FWDM/4745kg (1,642lb)128km/h29.35.41978-87Air
Visa 10EXV954450NaN0/600066Nm/3000810kg (1,790lb)133km/h19.86.61986-881Water
Visa Super/Super E/ L /
11 E/11 RE/Entreprise
XW71124500NaN0/550084Nm/2500800kg (1,800lb)144km/h16.67.71978-88
Visa Cabriolet813kg (1,792lb)137km/h20.76.51983-85
Visa Super XXZ7G1219640NaN0/600091Nm/3000815kg (1,797lb)155km/h14.08.31980-82
Visa 14 TRSXY71360600NaN0/5000105Nm/2500830kg (1,830lb)153km/h14.06.31985-87
Visa GT/Chrono2/TonicXY8800NaN0/58003109Nm/2800M/5830kg (1,830lb)168km/h10.97.31982-85
Visa Chrono4XYR930NaN0/5800125Nm/4500850kg (1,870lb)173km/h10.28.51982
Visa 1000 Pistes- 1120NaN0/6800131Nm/4500AWD183km/h8.791983
Visa GTiXU5J1580Electronic
Multi Port Injection
1050NaN0/6250134Nm/4000FWDM/5870kg (1,920lb)188km/h9.17.41985-86
XU5 JA/K1150NaN0/6250192km/h8.87.81986-88
Diesel Versions
Visa 17 D/17 RD/
17 D Entreprise
XUD7/K1769Naturally Aspirated
Mechanical
Indirect Injection
600NaN0/4600110Nm/2000FWDM/4890kg (1,960lb)152km/h15.95.21984-88Water
Note:
1As early as 1984 in some markets
2It is understood the Chrono not solely intended to France and introduced in 1983
372 PS at 6000 rpm for the Swiss market
44 Designed exclusively for the French market

Sport variants

The first mass-produced sport variant of the Visa was the GT in 1982. It was powered by the 1360 cc XY engine with two downdraft Weber single-barrel carburetors and produced. A lower power single-carb engine was produced for Switzerland. In 1985 a limited production 'GT Tonic' version was released with the addition of a sportier body kit incorporating the riveted wheel arches from the 'Chrono' motorsport model.

Built in late 1981 the Visa Trophée was produced in limited numbers for homologation in the rally group B category. It used the 1219 cc XZ engine as used in the Visa Super X but with heavily modified cylinder head, breathing through two side draft Weber 40 DCOE carburetors and producing an impressive 1000NaN0. The Trophée was designed specifically for the entry level rally car market such as privateers and dealership teams. It had weight savings over the GT such as lighter weight fibre glass body panels, re-designed dashboard and lexan side windows allowing it to weigh in at just under 700 kg. Rally versions were sometimes increased in capacity up to 1299 cc and could produce up to 1400NaN0.

The Visa Chrono was released in 1982 intended for competition in the same vein as the Trophée but in the larger capacity group B engine class. It used the same 1360 cc XY engine as the GT but with a modified, larger valve head and two double-barrel side draft Solex C35 carburetors and produced 930NaN0. Aside from the exterior body decals other modifications to the car such as the bodykit, with Cibie fog lights, and dashboard also differentiated it from the GT. 2160 were produced for the French market and a further 1600 produced for continental Europe outside France. The non-French models did not have the Solex carbs but the GT's Weber carb and head set up and produced 800NaN0.

The Visa "Mille Pistes" was a four wheel drive version of the Visa homologated for the group B B/10 class. The production versions were known as the Visa 1000 Pistes 4 x 4 of which 200 were built for homologation in 1984. The production version was essentially a 4WD Chrono with the same 1360 cc engine but on twin Weber 40 DCOE carbs and producing 1120NaN0. The Mille Pistes received its name after a Visa 4 x 4 competing in the experimental category won this rally in 1983, with Wambergue and Laverne driving. The evolution models were modified by Denis Mathiot; the displacement was increased to 1440 cc and the resulting power ranged from 135to, with the weight down to 750kg (1,650lb).[23]

At the Paris Salon 1984, for model year 1985, the high-performance 1.6 GTi was presented.[15] The GTi used the 1.6 L fuel injected XU5J engine and transmission combination in 105or versions, borrowed from the successful Peugeot 205 GTI. The car used plastic wheel arch extensions to hide a wider track that was needed to accommodate the larger engine, something that also had to be done for the diesel model. It received good reviews about its ride, performance and roadholding, but due to its older, failed facelift looks and its five-doors, even with a much lower price than the chic 205, it was not a big seller.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Joest Jonathan . Ouaknine . 2007-11-19 . Un(e) Visa pour la Chine . A Visa for China . Le Blog Auto . https://web.archive.org/web/20120304160335/https://www.leblogauto.com/2007/11/une-visa-pour-la-chine.html . 2012-03-04 .
  2. Web site: Zébu roulant - Madagascar : une île en sursis - Blog LeMonde.fr . Madagascar.blog.lemonde.fr . 24 March 2010 . 6 August 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100621064247/http://madagascar.blog.lemonde.fr/2010/03/24/zebu-noir . 21 June 2010 . dead .
  3. Web site: Julian . Marsh . Citroën G-mini prototype and projet EN101 . Citroenet.org.uk . 7 September 2012.
  4. Web site: Projet Y - Citroënet. 7 January 2010.
  5. Web site: The Glasgow Herald - Google News Archive Search. news.google.com.
  6. Mère Peugeot's Citroën . . 30 September 1978. Citroënët . 149 . 4273 . Michael . Scarlett .
  7. AGgw . De AutoGids . 140 . 6 . 121 . Gedetailleerde Wegtest: Citroën Visa 14 TRS . Detailed Road Test . Philippe . De Leener . nl-be . 1985-02-07 . Uitgeverij Auto-Magazine . Brussels, Belgium .
  8. Web site: Citroën Visa - Citroënet . 7 January 2010.
  9. Modern mjukis . Modern Softie . TVn20 . sv . . Specialtidningsförlaget AB . Stockholm, Sweden . 27 . 1982-09-22 . 20 . 34 . Dag E. . Hogsten .
  10. [#TVn20|Hogsten]
  11. AG78 . De AutoGids . 78 . 3 . 82 . Het Jaar 1983 (5) . The year 1983 (5) . Tony . Verhelle . nl . 1982-09-16 . Uitgeverij Auto-Magazine . Brussels, Belgium .
  12. AG140 . De AutoGids . 140 . 6 . A25 . Auto Nieuws: Citroën Visa 14 S Tonic . Car News . Etienne . Visart . nl-be . 1985-02-07 . Uitgeverij Auto-Magazine . Brussels, Belgium .
  13. Web site: Sunday classic: Citroën Visa GT Tonic . https://web.archive.org/web/20150915160742/https://ranwhenparked.net/2013/02/03/sunday-classic-citroen-visa-gt-tonic/ . 2015-09-15 . RanWhenParked.net . Ronan . Glon . 2013-02-03 .
  14. Web site: Visavision . Visavision.info . 28 September 2011.
  15. Book: Automobil Revue 1987 . Büschi . Hans-Ulrich . Hallwag AG . Berne, Switzerland . de, fr . 231 . 82 . 5 March 1987. 3-444-00458-3 .
  16. CAR magazine 1985
  17. Automobil Revue 1987, p. 232
  18. Web site: What's New . Popular Science . Michelle Higgins . January 1979 .
  19. [#AGgw|De Leener]
  20. Citroën Visa Handbook
  21. AG140 . De AutoGids . 140 . 6 . A5–A8 . Katalogusprijzen . Catalog Prices . Etienne . Visart . nl-be . 1985-02-07 . Uitgeverij Auto-Magazine . Brussels, Belgium .
  22. Web site: Citroën Visa and C15 . Citroenvisa.net . 28 September 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110930142225/http://www.citroenvisa.net/vindex.htm . 30 September 2011 . dead .
  23. AG109 . De AutoGids . 109 . 4 . 139 . Citroën Visa en BX: vierwielaandrijving voor de kompetitie . Four-wheel-drive for competition . Tourneur . Henry . nl . 24 November 1983 . Uitgeverij Auto-Magazine . Brussels, Belgium .