The Sleekest Two-Cylinder Car You’ll See Today: Cold Start

Cs Panhardcd
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Are you familiar with the Panhard CD? It’s a remarkable car. I mean, all Panhards are kind of remarkable, but this one just sort of takes all the remarkable of ’50s and ’60s-era Panhards and distills it down into its pure, concentrated form, which is the Panhard CD, and probably would be dangerous if ingested. Designed by sports car designer Charles Deutsch (of DB/Deutsch-Bonnet fame), the Panhard CD was the production version of the CD Dyna designed and built for the 1962 24 Hours of Le Mans. The production version had a fiberglass body with an incredibly low of 0.22. Even better, the sleek car was powered by an air-cooled Panhard flat-twin engine, like they always used, making either 49 horsepower, or, in Rallye form, a ravenous 59 hp.

Oh and that Oscar Wilde quote on there? Here’s the translation:

“Beauty cannot be discussed, it reigns by divine right. It makes anyone who owns it a prince.”

My friend who knows Oscar Wilde like the back of her hand didn’t recognize this one, but it seems to be from The Portrait of Dorian Gray.

 

Cs Panhardcd Cutaway

Only built from 1963 to 1965, about 179 of these were built. Think about how badass you had to be back then, and how sophisticated your car tastes would have been, to have looked at the vast selection of showy V8 grand touring cars out there and picked a sleek French FWD sports car with a meager two cylinders.

Cs Panhardcd 2up

Look at that smug pipe-smoking bastard there; he knows exactly how cool he is, and he’s right. No arguments here.

For something so refined and sleek, the cover of the brochure is strangely crude, reveling in its own roughness:

Cs Panhardcd Cover

Is that metal slag? Did they get a welder to weld those badges to a metal slab and then drip molten metal all over the place? I love it.

38 thoughts on “The Sleekest Two-Cylinder Car You’ll See Today: Cold Start

  1. She’s a looker.

    Also… why aren’t fender skirts a thing anymore? They can be done tastefully, even add to the overall design, as proven here.
    I mean, modern car design is continuously leaning further and further against the wind tunnel, always looking for more aerodynamics. Can we bring back spats already? It simply doesn’t make sense that automakers seem to have an illogical aversion to them.
    I haven’t seen them on a new design since the Honda Insight.

  2. I knew it was a Panhard from the side profile because of those little MPC injection molded plastic cars sold in bags or boxes, issued circa 1961/1962… those things aren’t just toys, they’re a crash course in automotive history.

    1. DB’s first cars were lightweight aerodynamic racers using Traction Avant engines and other bits and bobs, and Panhard was later purchased by Citroën. I always assumed that Deutsch’s aerodynamic thinking influenced Bertoni but perhaps it worked both ways.

  3. “Is that metal slag? Did they get a welder to weld those badges to a metal slab and then drip molten metal all over the place?”

    At a guess it’s meant to be evocative of the works of Rodin.

    1. i once was shown around a printing museum. next to one of the presses or typesetting machines was a bucket of formerly molten lead which had solidified with a strangely irregular surface. the image above reminds me of that.

  4. This car crowds my brain.
    It gives a fragile vibe like the birdcage Maserati. I imagine bad crumpling in a crash.
    That nose! Those rectangular lights with the extreme sexiness of the lower-case “panhard!” Can it be that no rock band ever slouched in front of this car on an album cover? That’s a loss!
    As to the brochure, clearly the designers were allowed to run wild on the car. This probably extended to the brochure, which wants to emphasize the hard in Panhard. Or maybe geological hardpan?
    Does anybody remember that Cream had a song “NSU” on their first album? (“Driving in my car! Smoking my cigar! The only time I’m happy’s when I play my guitar!”)
    Enough. Everybody have a nice day.

  5. I love quirky French stuff as much as anyone (hell, I’ve winter beatered a Renault 6 once) but those squaerish front lights are just horrible on an otherwise very attractive and sleek little car. Looks like the racing version, LM, got that much better handled with round aero covers. Also, the LM got supercharger attached to it’s flat twin!

    1. Compare the drag coefficient of the production version, with a Cd of 0.22, to the racing version(1967 Panhard CD Peugeot 66C), which had a Cd of 0.13.

      We need a modern lightweight sportscar with a Cd of 0.13 and Miata-like frontal area. You could put almost any LS V8 engine into such a thing and regarding highway fuel economy, it would probably out-do the Prius.

    1. IIRC, there were two “indexes:” Index of Performance, and Index of Thermal Efficiency, both based on fuel consumption and some weird French math equation that I never understood. Panhard (or, to be more accurate, Panhard-powered Deutsch-Bonnets) won both, often.

      For having such tiny engines, these things could make some speed. Light weight and low drag will do that for you.

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