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Peugeot 104
Car model
Car model
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Peugeot 104 |
| image | Peugeot 104S 1979.jpg |
| caption | 1979 Peugeot 104S 5-door |
| manufacturer | Peugeot |
| class | Supermini (B) |
| body_style | 4-door saloon (1972–1976) |
| 3-door hatchback (1974–1988) | |
| 5-door hatchback (1976–1988) | |
| engine | 954 cc *XV* I4 |
| 1,124 cc *XW* I4 | |
| 1,219 cc *XZ* I4 | |
| 1,360 cc *XY* I4 | |
| production | 1972–1988 |
| wheelbase | 95.25 in *(4/5 door)* |
| 87.81 in *(3 door)* | |
| length | 141 in *(4/5 door)* |
| 129.25 in *(3 door)* | |
| width | 59.8 in |
| height | 54.75 in* (4/5 door)* |
| 52.75 in* (3 door)* | |
| layout | FF layout |
| related | Citroën LN / LNA |
| Citroën Visa | |
| Talbot Samba | |
| successor | Peugeot 106 |
| Peugeot 205 | |
| designer | Paolo Martin at Pininfarina |
| assembly | France: Mulhouse (Peugeot SA Mulhouse Plant), Poissy (Peugeot SA Poissy Plant) |
| Tunisia: La Marsa (STAFIM) |
3-door hatchback (1974–1988) 5-door hatchback (1976–1988) 1,124 cc XW I4 1,219 cc XZ I4 1,360 cc XY I4 87.81 in (3 door) 129.25 in (3 door) 52.75 in* (3 door)* Citroën Visa Talbot Samba Peugeot 205 Tunisia: La Marsa (STAFIM)|
The Peugeot 104 is a supermini car produced by the French company Peugeot between 1972 and 1988. It was designed by Paolo Martin was initially only sold as a four-door saloon car, with a three-door hatchback variant introduced in 1974 and a five-door hatchback version replacing the saloon in 1976. The 104 was the first model produced at the company's Mulhouse plant. It was also the first new Peugeot introduced since 1955 not to be offered in a diesel version.
Production history
Saloon (1972)
The 104 was introduced at the September 1972 Paris Motor Show. On its launch, the Peugeot 104 was offered as a compact four-door fastback. Although it had a short, sloping rear end that suggested a hatchback, there was originally a separate boot/trunk, as on a conventional saloon. Power was provided from a 954 cc Douvrin engine called the PSA X engine, an all-aluminium alloy, chain driven overhead cam, with gearbox in the sump, sharing engine oil, which was jointly developed with Renault. This transmission-in-sump arrangement was similar to that pioneered by the British Motor Corporation in the Mini. It gave good levels of economy and refinement as well as having an impressive chassis which made ride and handling excellent. The engine was mounted leaning backwards, at a 72-degree angle.
File:Peugeot 104 (early one) at Peugeot Museum in Sochaux.JPG|The 104 was originally available only with a four-door booted body. The hatchback version appeared four years later File:Peugeot 104 1974.jpg|1972–1976 Rear
Coupé (1973)
A three-door coupé was launched on a shortened chassis at the 1973 Paris Motor Show, featuring the same 954 cc engine as the saloon. Headlights were larger and rectangular in shape, rather than square. Originally sold as the "104 Coupé", the shorter wheelbase models later received names beginning with a "Z" (e.g. ZL, ZA, ZS2). Equipment levels which begin with a "G" or an "S" were used for the longer four/five-door variants.
File:Peugeot 104 (39730449771) (cropped).jpg|1973–1978 Coupé File:1977 Peugeot 104 Coupé ZS - 1124cc 66PS XW Petrol - Orange Mandarine - 04-06-2023, Rear Left.jpg|1977 Coupé rear
1976 facelift
A facelift in July 1976 Peugeot had been afraid that a five-door 104 would steal sales from the old-fashioned 204 Break, but with production of the 204 coming to an end in July 1976 this was no longer a concern. Rear light clusters were modified slightly with indicators that wrapped around to the sides of the car, and a 1.1-litre engine was also made available. The coupé was made available in two versions, the ZL and also the more powerful ZS with 66 PS. A modified camshaft on the 954 cc engines also retarded the valve timing in order to favour fuel economy at the price of a slight power reduction. 1977 proved to be the most successful year for the 104, with 190,000 being built.
File:Peugeot 104 GL (15436439521).jpg|1976 facelift (Note the wrap around rear indicators) File:Peugeot 104 ZS 1976.jpg|The 104ZS introduced in 1976 was promoted as the sporting Peugeot 104
1978 facelift
The coupé gained a third (cheaper) commercial variant with only two seats, the ZA, and all coupé variants were given larger rear light clusters with integral reversing lights. Higher specification five-door models gained the larger headlights and grille introduced for the coupé. The more powerful engine from the ZS was briefly available in the five-door hatchback "Sundgau" special edition, of which 1,200 examples were built in March and April 1978. For 1979 the ZL Coupé was upgraded to a 57 PS version of the 1,124 cc engine.
File:1976-78 Peugeot 104 GL (10693483786).jpg|1978 facelift (Note the larger headlights and shorter grille borrowed from the coupé) File:Peugeot-104-2.jpg|1978 facelift Coupé (Note the larger rear light clusters)
1980 facelift
The 1980 facelift was minor, with model designations changing in line with other vehicles in the Peugeot line-up. However, a 1.2-litre engine was now also offered (in the SR), with the same power as the lesser 1.1.
1982 facelift
This facelift incorporated smaller headlights, a new grille and rear light clusters that included reversing lights. The amount of chrome trim was reduced and generally replaced by black plastic. At the end of summer, the ZS coupé variant was given an 80 PS 1,360 cc engine to improve its performance. The existing 72 PS version remained on sale at a lower price until the 1984 model year was introduced. The power gain was achieved by using two carburetors rather than one double-barrel unit.
File:1982 Peugeot 104 GR 1.1 Front.jpg|1982 facelift (Note new grille and rear light clusters) File:1982 Peugeot 104 GR 1.1 Rear.jpg|1982 facelift
1983 on
In 1983, the number of models offered was reduced to make way for the new 205 and exports to most foreign markets gradually came to an end. It remained on sale in France until the end of production in 1988. The sporting ZS remained on sale until late 1985; for the 1986 model year only the 50 PS 1,124 cc engine remained. There was a minor facelift in 1987, introducing a new grille with three body-coloured horizontal bars and anthracite bumpers - now without a chrome band. The Z, Style Z, and five-door GLS continued to be available with this engine in the home market until 1988.
File:Peugeot 104.JPG|1987–1988 Coupé (Note the different grille) File:Peugeot 104 (15389312686).jpg|1987–1988 5-door model
ZS 2
A limited run of 1,000 sporting ZS 2s were built in 1979. They were powered by a 93 PS 1,360 cc four-cylinder engine.
Prototypes
Several prototypes based on the 104 are known to exist. Different power sources were tried out, including electric and diesel. The M18 prototype (circa 1976) was a blue 5-door estate, with rear light clusters similar to those that were used on the 504 estate. The M23 was a dark red 3-door van concept based on the saloon rather than the existing 3-door coupé. A yellow three-box saloon (pictured) is also known, as is a white pick-up truck and the "Peugette" - a roadster prototype built on the 104 ZS platform.
Market impact and replacement
The Peugeot 104 was one of the most successful European small cars of the 1970s but it was starting to show its age against more modern rivals by the turn of the 1980s. When Peugeot launched the stylish all-new 205 in 1983, the 104 was withdrawn from most European markets, but it continued in France as a budget choice until production finally ceased in May 1988 after 16 years, in which time 1,624,992 Peugeot 104s had been built. 345,849 of these were the short wheelbase Coupé versions.
As of 2019, only 12 Peugeot 104s remain taxed and on the roads in the United Kingdom with 24 on SORN.
References
References
- (27 March 1976). "Fahrbericht: Peugeot 104ZS: "Verkürzte Ausführung des Peugeot 104 mit stärkerem Motor"".
- ""Peugeot 104 the great story of a small car"".
- [[Musée de l'Aventure Peugeot]]. The exhibit label (2012) states: «[Peugeot] 104 Berline: Modele qui inaugura la nouvelle usine de [[Mulhouse]] en [[Alsace]] en 1972…»
- Allain, François. (1996). "Guide Peugeot: Tous le modèles de 1970 à 1990". E/P/A.
- "Les Berlines". Club 104 Peugeot.
- Frère, Paul. (January 1974). "Paris Show Introduces V-8 Dino & 4-rotor Corvette". CBS Consumer Publishing Division.
- "Les Coupés". Club 104 Peugeot.
- (2 November 2008). "Autocade Peugeot 104". Autocade.net.
- [[#Allain (1996). Allain (1996)]], p. 44.
- "Motorbase Peugeot 104". Motorbase.com.
- [[#Allain (1996). Allain (1996)]], pp. 49, 53.
- Bey-Rozet, Yves. (12 August 1982). "Trop peu, trop tard". Auto Hébdo.
- [[#Allain (1996). Allain (1996)]], p. 84.
- [[#Bey-Rozet. Bey-Rozet]], p. 17.
- "Club Peugeot UK - Article on 104". ClubPeugeotUK.org.
- [[#Allain (1996). Allain (1996)]], p. 94.
- [[#Allain (1996). Allain (1996)]], pp. 106-107.
- "Club 104 Peugeot prototypes (French language)". Club-104-peugeot.org.
- (1 June 2008). "Autocade Citroen LN". Autocade.net.
- (7 December 2008). "Autocade Talbot Samba". Autocade.net.
- "Index". Club 104 Peugeot.
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