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The Citroen C6 is a magnificent conglomeration of technology,
luxury, comfort and cutting edge styling.
The Citroen C6 is yet another example of a manufacturer of mass
market cars wasting billions of euros on egocentric attempts to
sell cars in a sector where it is bound to fail.
Which of these categories will the C6 fall in?
On the plus side, Citroen can point to a history of involvement
with magnificent, desirable cars which set new heights of
technological attainment, and made buyers go weak at the knees
with desire.
Think of the fabulous Citroen Light 15 Traction Avant in the
1930s which pioneered a monocoque body (no chassis) and
front-wheel drive. Then there’s the DS, which in 1955 was
aerodynamically way ahead of its time and gave us hydropneumatic
suspension, disc brakes and swivelling headlights. The SM, a
supercar joint venture with Italy’s Maserati, introduced speed
sensitive steering, and the XM in the 1990s, just looked great.
Where’s the élan, quirkiness?
But since being taken over by Peugeot in 1975, after
overreaching itself financially in the pursuit of perfection,
Citroen has lost its reputation for the avant-garde. Most of its
models now are, not surprisingly, derivatives of Peugeots. The
élan and quirkiness has gone in the name of financial
responsibility. Only the small-selling top of the range models
still use the hydraulic, now called hydractive suspension. Sales
are hampered by a reputation for unreliability.
The C6 has a huge mountain to climb to match its rich heritage,
not to mention the current competition.
The C6 grabs your attention. Its looks hit you right between the
eyes. It is big. It is sleek, at least most of it is. The back
end lets the design down as it seems to lose itself in a mess of
uncertainty. Inside it is huge and comfortable for all the
passengers. You could get five in there and they’d be happy.
TGV seats
The rear seats are called TGVs because of their ability to slide
back and forth electrically, like the famous French train’s
seats. The rear passengers have a veto over the front passenger;
you can push a button to make the front passenger seat move
forward. Presumably, Jacques Chirac insisted on this when
Citroen designers consulted him. (Cynics will say that the only
willing buyer of a C6 will be whoever’s President of France.).
The rimless doors shut with more of a rattle than the expected,
satisfying kerthunk.
The quality of the interior is good without being up to the
standards of the cars to beat in this sector – BMW, Audi, Lexus,
Mercedes and Jaguar. The fake wood on the facia was atrocious.
The dials were not particularly easy to read, but that doesn’t
matter because of the Head Up Display, which projects all the
main information you need into a hologram at eye level. This
works splendidly, particularly in areas with many speed cameras
and changing speed limits which normally necessitate much
looking down and away from where you’re going. However in the
short time with the car, I couldn’t find out how to check the
amount of fuel remaining.
Wrong button
The C6’s ride promises much. When you turn on the ignition you
feel the self-levelling suspension firm slightly, and settle
back down when you turn it off. But on the road, the ride seemed floaty and thumpy, far from the magic carpet ride you would have
expected from the hydractive suspension. This was probably
because a button for a harsher, higher setting had been
selected. The sophistication and extent of technology can lead
to unintended consequences. The suspension lowers as the car
gathers speed to improve stability, and cut wind resistance and
therefore fuel use. The steering was sharp and easy, belying the
bigness of the car.
Citroen makes a big deal about the high specification included
in the price. There are dual function Xenon directional
headlights, a speed sensitive rear spoiler, electric parking
brake, automatic windscreen wipers and lights, cruise control
with speed limiter, and automatic dual zone air conditioning,
all standard.
High specification
“Buyers of other similarly priced cars will struggle to match
the C6’s standard equipment list without picking items from
their options list and delving several thousand pounds further
into the budget,” says Citroen.
According to Citroen, it will take almost £3,000 for an Audi A6
2.7 TDi S Multitronic to match the C6’s specification, about
£6,500 for a BMW 530D SE, and £5,000 for a Mercedes E320 CDi
Avantgarde.`
And this is where the battle for sales will take place.
Looks will play an important role, and according to Jason King,
Forecasting Editor at residual value guru EurotaxGlass, the C6
scores well here.
“The C6 is a fine car and a thing of beauty, a work of art
almost. It shows that Citroen has returned to its roots and that
design is passionate and at the forefront of their thinking. Is
it enough in a car for this sector in the U.K.? Probably not at
the price that Citroen has decided upon. A great spec and great
looks still seems insufficient to overcome the baggage that the
brand still carries with it,” said King.
Residual estimates spell doom
Sadly, in this price bracket, the chances don’t look great,
according to King, and he estimates that the C6 Exclusive HDi,
will be worth only 28 per cent of its purchase price after 3
years and 60,000 miles.
When you consider that EurotaxGlass estimates the residual value
of a BMW 5 2.5 TD SE at 44 per cent, an Audi 2.7 TDi SE at 41
per cent, and a Mercedes E-class 3.0 E320 Elegance at 40 per
cent after 3 years, you can see that the big Citroen is fighting
a losing battle.
But if you do take the plunge, at least you will be safe.
Safety is a big bragging area for Citroen as it labels the C6
“arguably, the safest car in the world” because of its 5-star
Euro NCAP rating for passenger protection and 4-star score for
pedestrian safety.
Warning ripples
Other standard stuff includes the complete range of acronyms for
computerised safety, tyre pressure warning, and active head
restraints. The Lane Departure Warning System, which sends
ripples of er warning through your rear, has been inherited from
the C4, although on the C6 I drove, the ripples sometimes came
on without apparent reason. The computer was just trying to
please me, perhaps.
There are three trim levels - the C6, C6 Lignage and C6
Exclusive - and two engines – a 3.0i litre V6 petrol and a 2.7
HDi V6 diesel which also performs in the Range Rover Sport,
Jaguar S and XJ, and Volvo S80. (Parent company Peugeot has a
diesel engine joint venture with Ford, which owns Range Rover,
Jaguar and Volvo).
The base model includes automatic dual zone air conditioning.
Lignage adds HUD, electric seats with 5 options, dual-function
Xenon headlights, front and rear parking sensors. The Exclusive
includes the Lane Departure thing, NavDrive, voice activation,
and you can pay for the TGV seats.
Prices
Prices start at £29,545 (€43,400) and top out at £37,845
(€55,500) for the Exclusive.
Citroen says that it is not competing with the Germans because
of the small numbers it will be selling – hundreds in Britain
(1,200 a year apparently), not the thousands moved by Audi, BMW,
and Mercedes. Citroen only expects to sell 20,000 C6s globally
in a year. These few buyers will be won over by the C6’s “looks,
its class leading levels of comfort and refinement and the
company’s enviable reputation for creating iconic large cars,”
said Citroen.
It will be helped by buyers’ boredom with the Teutonic product,
says Citroen, a claim also echoed recently by Cadillac in its
own uphill struggle to sell against the Germans.
Where’s the pizzazz?
The C6 is an admirable vehicle in many ways, but it lacks a
crucial quality – pizzazz. Ever since I first set eyes on a
Light 15, I felt I had to have one. The same goes for the DS and
the SM. I felt the same about the XM, and bought one. These cars
triggered an emotional reaction because of the way they looked,
as much as how they performed. I’m afraid I don’t share
EurotaxGlass King’s view that this car is beautiful. The C6, I’m
afraid to say, is a bit of blob on wheels. Very nice, well
suspended wheels to be sure. But it doesn’t do the job.
The verdict is hubris, not chutzpah.

Citroen C6 Exclusive HDi
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Engine:
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2,720 cc common rail direct injection V6
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Power:
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208 bhp
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Gearbox:
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6-speed automatic
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Drive:
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front wheels
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Acceleration: 0-62/100 km/h
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0-62 mph/100 km/h – 8.9 seconds
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Top Speed:
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143 mph-230 km/h
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Fuel Consumption:
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claimed combined 32.5 mpg-8.7 l/km
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CO2 Emissions:
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230g/km
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Length:
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4,908
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Width:
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1,860
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Height:
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1,464
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Suspension
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Hydractive
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Price:
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£37,845 - €55,500 – on sale now across Europe
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Competition:
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Audi A6, BMW 5-series, Mercedes E class, Lexus GS,
Jaguar S-type, Chrysler 300C
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Would I buy one?
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No
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Rating:
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*** out of 5
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For:
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evocative, loaded, comfort, not German
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Against:
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not evocative enough, can’t match the competition,
not German
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