Because the Citroën really does present very well indeed, which is quite the compliment for a black car because no other colour highlights flaws and imperfections so ruthlessly, so the fact we can’t see any significant dents or dinks in the panels speaks volumes.
Being a French car there are yellow bulbs in the headlamps, of course, plus a magnificent pair of supplementary driving lamps at bumper level.
Other nice touches include an opening windscreen that pivots at the top, a thoughtful piece of design that’s joined by rear-hinging front doors, something Rolls-Royce recently readopted for some of its models as it makes for a more elegant entry and exit.
It’s got louvres on either side of the centre-hinged bonnet too, and these run straight and true. The spare wheel is mounted on the boot lid underneath an integrated metal cover too, the grille features a charming Confederation Des Syndicats Medicaux badge – and have you ever seen a more elegantly mounted French plate?
Of course, the most noticeable design flourish is the Citroën ‘chevron’ logo on the imposing radiator grille. Picked out in silver, no-one is going to mistake the marque you’re driving.
Nor the era of the car you’re in thanks to those sweeping front wings and natty-but-minimal bumpers.
The painted steel wheels are in a decent condition. Lacking dinks and damage, they would benefit from a lick of paint. Maybe some Autosol on the chrome hubcaps, too.
And you’ll need new tyres as well. The 165-400 Michelin X tyres – what else would you fit to a car like this? – might be the correct make but they’re old and perished, so you’ll need to fit new ones.
Nonetheless, we will never get tired of telling you that experience shows that matching high-quality tyres are an infallible sign of a caring and mechanically sympathetic owner who is prepared to spend the appropriate amount in maintaining their car properly.
As for work to do, the bodywork has clearly been touched-up in places, most noticeably around the bonnet. The chromework is dull and pitted too, but there are no serious dents, so the extent these running-repairs and the general wear ‘n’ tear will bother you depends on your attitude towards an honest patina.
Rust appears to be minimal, but what there is will need sorting sooner rather than later while it’s still a cosmetic problem than a structural one.