A Ratty Old Peugeot Truck Reminds Me Why LA Is Such A Great Place For Cars: Cold Start

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I left Los Angeles a good number of years ago, and I still miss the cars. I mean sure, there’s cars everywhere, even interesting cars if you’re willing to look, but LA is a special case in that the number and variety of interesting cars is so vast that you barely even have to look. Unexpected things just pop up, like hamberries in a hamberry muffin. That’s what happened when Autopian contributor Emily Velasco was velocipeding around the El Monte area and spotted this remarkable orange wonder: a 1971 Peugeot 404 diesel pickup! There can’t be more than a handful of these in America, if that, and this one has some details that tell us it comes from an even more unexpected place. Let’s dig in.

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The first thing I noticed about this delightfully ratty yet charming pickup truck was a small yet significant detail: those little white reflectors under the headlights. There’s only one country in the world that required cars to have white reflectors up front, and that country was South Africa. You can see them in this ad for South African Peugeot 404s:

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The South African origin of this truck is further confirmed by the fact that it’s right hand drive, too. The fun thing about little facts like these are that sometimes they’re exactly what’s needed to uncover even more facts, which is why I was able to find the actual car itself in a Reddit post, along with more pictures. Based on the post, the last time the truck was registered before the current owner was in 1982! The bed of this one may be a South Africa-unique item, because the European 404 pickups seem to have had a different bed, though there are examples of this bed in other markets, too.

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That rear bumper looks like it came from a Volkswagen Type 3 Squareback, cut in half, and separated a few inches, leaving a gap that the earlier photos showed once held a tow hitch.

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Inside, we see a dash that looks in surprisingly good shape, along with a seat that seems oddly well-preserved, too. The shifter looks column-mounted, with a white shift knob that reminds me of a marshmallow stuck on a stick, awaiting the kiss of flame.

What fantastic little truck! Good find, Emily!

50 thoughts on “A Ratty Old Peugeot Truck Reminds Me Why LA Is Such A Great Place For Cars: Cold Start

  1. My Dad had one of these, a petrol 404, back when I was in kindergarten. I’m a bit nostalgic as at a point it was the family hauler. Also, it seemed every shade tree mechanic had parts for it and could have it fixed on the side of the road. Not to mention it seemed to handle rural Kenyan roads very well. It was also my first time seeing brake failure first hand, when my uncle had to pump the brakes when approaching a busy roundabout. If I recall correctly, the Kenyan assembled trucks had white reflectors as well.

  2. My granddad was a Peugeot mechanic so I grew up in 203s, 403s, 404s, 504s etc starting in the late 60s. The ride quality in the 404 was wonderful. They were bulletproof. Find a good one and you could DD that sucker even today.

  3. Hey Torch, can you do an explanation on CA emissions and vehicle inspection requirements? I always hear that it’s impossible to keep old cars in CA because of their regulations, and DT’s stories about moving out there seem to confirm that, but then you see cars like this. How do these cars exist in CA? Are they registered somewhere else, or are there exemptions for pre-OBDII or classics like in other states?

    Help me understand!

  4. Speaking of South Africa market uniqueness, I recently learned a version of the AMC Hornet called the Rambler Hornet was built in South Africa – in a factory owned by Toyota and powered by a Chevrolet engine.

    1. Those Chevrolet engines (the old 230ci six and four-cylinder derivatives) were installed in tons of machines, due to South Africa’s local content laws which were based on weight. A locally built, heavy-ass engine made a lot of sense.

  5. I can smell the inside of that car.

    A family member had a contemporaneous 504 and there’s something about the seat vinyl + motor fluids smell that’s unmistakable.

  6. And what about the Peugeot 505 sedan you can see in the first and 3rd of the 404, is it the same one, not sure I can’t enhance this page, I think it’s an error 404.

  7. can confirm, shifter is column-mounted, 4 speed. OE the knob is grey soft plastic. Source: the 1970 Peugeot 404 I learned to drive on in S. Africa..
    That was a terrific car, shockingly reliable and sturdy. Thank you and Emily for showing this one, now I need to visit LA and that Peugeot specialist shop..

  8. We used to have a Peugeot 504 Diesel pick-up work truck.

    Terrible but also unkillable. We did just awful things to that truck.

    My first day at work we drive to the beech and ate a bag of chips (think really fat French fries, I’m not sure what you call them over there), then rattled our way to the supplier down the coast to fill it up with cast iron doodads, then scrapped our way back to the warehouse. I learnt a lot about workplace skiving at that job, and this was before we had the internet on phones to help with that.

      1. Yep, I have a 1982 French brochure for a 504 pickup and saw them all over Israel. They are effectively the French HiLux. One of my daydream custom ideas was to fit a 504 pickup with US spec hquad headlights, bucket seats and a floor shift, plus alloy wheels as a custom mini truck

      2. Yep, we still have quite a few on the road here in Brazil where I have lived for 30 years. All Diesel. Built in Argentina. Damn Brazilian government only allowed imports of the ute version, but not the 4 door saloon sadly.

  9. The designers left a perfectly flat place to mount good-sized taillights aside the tailgate. And then they placed tiny ones in a terrible position down low.

  10. Looks like Emily found a little treasure trove of Peugeots. There’s one parked behind the truck, and another a little further down the street. Color me intrigued.

  11. I’m fixated on the ad copy, specifically the misplaced hyphen in the phrase “fine tooth-comb.” Did tooth-combs precede toothbrushes, or were they an evolution? Do they untangle and straighten your teeth? So many questions.

      1. It really should be “fine-toothed comb”, since it is describing the comb as having fine teeth.

        The ad also describes the trucks as being “Thoroughly built”, which I think we can all agree is perfectly accurate. 🙂

  12. It’s got a different rear window, too. Man, what a neat little truck though.

    I wonder, is there maybe any particular reason the owner has “RIGHT HAND DRIV” in mailbox letters on the tailgate? Just aesthetics, or general quirkiness perhaps?

    1. i was watching some show or movie recently and a U.S. miltary truck in the UK had the warning: caution left hand drive painted on the tailgate. it’s a thing for fish out of water?

    1. I love this truck but it is underpowered, unsafe, difficult to drive, and not mainstream attractive. The Ford Maverick Hybrid (which I also really like) is the closest you will get to this truck in the modern world.

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