23 July 2016

Is the Citroën a lemon?


I want to thank CHM for the lunch at the Relais d'Artémis that I've described over the last few days. We go there every time he comes to the Loire Valley, and the place seems to be especially on top of things right now. The menu I described, which includes an amuse-bouche (an hors-d'œuvre), a starter course, a main course, a cheese plate, a dessert, and what's called a mignardise (a second small dessert with coffee), is priced at 41 euros/person this summer. I think the meal for the three of us, with two bottles of wine, cost CHM about 200 euros.

And then the car let us down. We left the restaurant at about 4:00 p.m. The Citroën was parked out front, head-in, with the hood facing a brick wall that was blazing hot. The outside temperature was about 85ºF (29ºC) and the car's on-board thermometer read 41ºC — that's slightly more than 105ºF — when we got in.

Walt was at the wheel, but the car didn't want to start. The battery was fine; it's almost brand new. The engine turned over but wouldn't catch. Walt kept trying. We didn't know what we were going to do on a Sunday afternoon, stuck in Bracieux, 25 miles from home. I picked up the phone to call the insurance company emergency service, not knowing of course how long it might take for somebody to get there and help us. Walt said: don't call yet. Let's keep trying.

CHM suggested putting the car's hood up to let the engine cool off, the way English people seem to do in such situations. I did that. Then I asked Walt to let me get into the driver's seat and give it a try. I had no luck at first, but after two or three failed attempts at starting the motor, it suddenly caught. We decided to keep it running and head for home. If we broke down somewhere along the way, at least we would be closer to Saint-Aignan. I was especially worried about CHM, who is after all 91 years old. We had a cell phone with us.

I wonder if putting the hood up really helped get the car started. Maybe... and it certainly didn't hurt.

Well, we made it. We pulled into the driveway and breathed a sigh of relief. We turned the motor off. Had it all been a false alarm? We came into the house to cool down and relax for the evening. The next morning, I went out to check on the car, and I realized that I had blocked in the old Peugeot by parking the Citroën where I had. I could have pushed the Citroën out of the way, but then it would have been so far away from the front gate that it would be hard for a tow-truck driver to get it back out.

 At the Relais d'Artémis, the mignardise of the day was a cream puff, served with a cup of espresso coffee.

I figured I might as well try to start the motor again. After a few attempts, I was successful. I backed the car out and parked it out behind the hedge, by the pond, in a place where visitors to the hamlet often park. I noticed at that point that a message was being displayed on the car's computer screen saying Défaillance Système Anti-Pollution — Emissions System Failure. I still thought the failure might be temperature-related. Or that maybe a filter of some kind was clogged. I hoped it wasn't worse than that.

My mechanic's garage has never been open on Mondays — his work-week has always been Tuesday through Saturday — so I didn't do anything that morning except move the car. I would deal with it the next day. I drove over to the garage Tuesday morning in the Peugeot. I told the owner, Dominique, what had happened. He said he was short-handed and couldn't really take the car in right then. He was all backed up for the day and the following day. And then Thursday was a holiday — July 14, Bastille Day — and he was taking a long weekend, opening back up only on Monday. "The Peugeot is running fine, isn't it?" he asked me. It was. I told him I'd be back in a week, either driving the Citroën or following the tow truck....

15 comments:

  1. LOL! Ken, you're giving up all my secrets! You're welcome. It is always a pleasure to enjoy a meal with you and Walt at the Relais d'Artémis. When we went there for your and our thirtieth anniversary, in 2013, was it the first time you went to this restaurant? I hope to be able to make it many more years (?). One can dream, innit?

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    1. chm... You are young my man, young!!
      The local news rag had a front page headline yesterday stating that there were "Près de trois cents centenaires en Touraine".... the oldest being a grand 107!! Way to go yet, laddie, you're still in shorts!!

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    2. I think 2013 was the first time we went to the Relais d'Artémis. I seem to remember that we planned to go to another restaurant in Bracieux, the Rendez-Vous des Gourmets, but it was either all booked or not open for lunch on the appointed day. So we fell back on the Artémis, and have never regretted it.

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    3. That's what my recollection was, but you never know!

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  2. That is a wonderful restaurant, I must say!

    I'll be interested to see what the mechanic ended up saying about the car. I remember having a problem with one of my cars... maybe my old BMW 2002?... where some coil was heating up, and it did help to do the open-the-hood trick.

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  3. Catalytic converter gone for a Burton? I can't think of anything else on the exhaust side that would be connected to the onboard computer!! Costly.... Hope it isn't, but....unless you give the car enough time to warm up on the drive, you can kill the converter very quickly.
    The red 2CV isn't liking the the heat either...developing airlocks in the petrol feed...
    The hotter it gets, the worse it gets for starting...
    The grey one has a lever on the pump so that I can manually pump the fuel into the float chamber....
    They removed that in the late 60s...and the pumps, although in the same position, can't be exchanged...humph!
    And Mr. Citroën's father's surname, before he moved to France from Belgium, was Citron...

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  4. Our 77 VW Camper is a lemon that still runs. It has problems in heat and we lift the engine cover in the back to cool it off. Of course your Citroen's engine is way more complicated than the VW's air cooled one. I'm glad you made it home safely and hope you haven't bought a lemon- maybe the problem will be fixed with a few $$$.

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    1. It's not a lemon, but the guy who sold it to me was less than straightforward.

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  5. Well consider yourself on the lucky side, you are not in charge of VW, now they have a real emissions problem! best of luck on repairs.

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    1. Good point. I bought a VW Passat in California that had its good points but also a lot of problems, considering that I bought it new. And it was built in Germany, not Mexico, where there were quality-control problems back then. I'll keep the Citroën.

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  6. DelaForge may be right. Catalytic converters cause problems sometimes.

    That mignardise and espresso looks great any time of day.

    They're still running lots of VW ads here for summer deals - can't believe anyone would buy one now. One wonders what else was concealed, if they're willing to "misrepresent" to that extent. Wish we had the option to buy Peugeot or Citroen in the States.

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  7. i love the title to this so much...and i'm glad your mechanic could get it fixed up. also that coffee shot..... fantastic. thanks!

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