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The Citroën DS (French pronunciation: [si.tʁɔ.ɛn de.ɛs]) is a front mid-engined, front-wheel drive executive car manufactured and marketed by Citroën from 1955 to 1975, in fastback/sedan, wagon/estate, and convertible body configurations, across three series of one generation.
After the 1974 bankruptcy of Citroën, Peugeot took ownership of the company and, in May 1975, divested from Maserati. Peugeot quickly decided to stop building the SM, as production had dropped to 294 cars in 1974 and 115 units the final year. Observers often attribute the demise of the SM to the 1973 oil crisis and economic recession. [40] [29]
1974 1991 E 4-door fastback. 5-door estate Citroën DS: Citroën XM: C-Crosser: 2007 2012 J 5-door SUV Citroën Méhari. Citroën FAF. Citroën C4 Aircross: C1: 2005 2021 A: 3/5-door hatchback: C2: 2003 2009 B 3-door hatchback Citroën Saxo: DS 3: C3 Picasso: 2009 2017 M 5-door estate Citroën Xsara Picasso: Citroën C3 Aircross: C3L: 2020 2021 ...
Deutsch: Citroën DS 20, Baujahr 1974, 4-Zylinder-Motor, 1985 cm³, 99 PS bei 5500/min, Höchstgeschwindigkeit 169 km/h (fiktives Kennzeichen) Date: 5 June 2016:
The older models continued to sell well: the peak production period of the DS was 1970, and 2CV was in 1974. As the 1970s progressed, circumstances became more unfavourable. In 1973, Fiat sold back to Michelin its 49% stake in the PARDEVI holding company that owned Citroën, the Citroën and Fiat joint announcement indicated that the benefits ...
DS Performance is the competitions department of DS Automobiles, which it claims was established to accelerate the electrification transition of the brand. Although the department doesn't participate directly in motorsport by using partners instead, it assists with technological development of Formula E cars and related marketing activities.
As a royal family fan, I'm always here for a new picture or portrait (King Charles's latest was particularly striking). Generally, they are quite posed and professional (they are royals, after all).
This combined with the development costs and new factory for the DS-replacing Citroën CX, the 1973/1974 oil crisis, and an aborted Wankel rotary engine, led Citroën to declare bankruptcy in 1974. The GS met with instant market acceptance and was the largest selling Citroën model for many years. 1,896,742 GS models and 576,757 GSA models were ...