The Citroën BX 4TC is a rally car, designed, developed and produced by French manufacturer Citroën; derived from the Citroën BX production car. A road-going, street-legal version was built to meet the requirements of the Group B category of the World Rally Championship. A total of 200 models were produced, as this was the production requirement.[1][2]

Citroën BX 4TC Evolution

Rally version

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Citroën BX 4TC engine bay.

With the 1985 World Rally Championship as its objective, the development of the new Group B took place under the control of Citroën's commercial services. It is the BX which, from 1983, is chosen. The specifications prove to be restrictive in view of the ambitions: you have to keep the architecture of the BX and take as many series 1 parts as possible. The 20 cars are built by the Citroën competition department based in Trappes and the hulls by Heuliez. The first tests take place on the circuit in December 1985, but reveal major handicaps: high weight, lack of power, and hydraulic suspensions increasing understeer. After two retirements for breakage and going off the road at Monte-Carlo 1986, it was in Sweden that the BX obtained its best place, sixth, thanks to Jean-Claude Andruet. On their last participation in the Acropolis rally, all three BXs retired. Citroën then withdrew from the championship following the dramas in Portugal and the Tour de Corse, in order to improve the design.[3]

Apart from experience in the World Rally Championship, the car was entered in rallycross in 1989 by Jacky Pivert, but without significant results for him.[3]

In 1991, 1992 and 1993 Jean-Luc Pailler became triple French rallycross champion with his Turbo 4x4, as well as Division 2 European Champion in 1993. His BX was not a 4TC but a totally distinct prototype. (1900 engine)[4]

The 4TC, therefore, did not enjoy much success during its short rallying career. In addition to the faults mentioned above, the unexpected stoppage of Group B in the year following its first entry did not give Citroën time to improve it much. The car had however aroused high expectations when its launch was announced, due to Citroën's past successes in rallying with the DS.[5]

Production version

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Group B homologation requires the manufacture and sale to the public of 200 "customer" road versions. Only 86 copies (also made by Heuliez) found takers; unsold examples were destroyed by Citroën. The engine is a 2142 cc N9TE, 16v inline-four with Bosch L-Jetronic fuel injected and a 7:1 compression ratio, rated at 200 hp DIN (147 kW) at 5,250 rpm. It has a cast-iron block, aluminum cylinder head, chain drive and overhead camshaft. Positioned longitudinally, with a sizable front overhang, it is turbocharged by a Garrett turbocharger with air/air exchanger. This engine was more commonly used on the Peugeot 505 Turbo, where it had proved very robust in competition and offering good potential for increased power. The engine was originally designed by Simca for Chrysler 160/180/2 litre, and the 2.2-litre version was also used in the Talbot Tagora and Matra Murena. The engine itself is mated to a 5-speed manual gearbox.[6]

The poor sales of the production BX 4TC are mainly explained, on the one hand, by its lack of image due to the lack of success of the rally version, and on the other hand by its performance, which is a little behind for a sports car. of such an extraction, in particular, because of its weight. However, its exclusivity, its pure Citroën soul (with the hydropneumatic suspension and a style with a strong personality derived from the BX) and, despite everything, its history in motorsport have, over time, take precedence over these defects. Today, the 4TC is a real collector's item, the rare copies of which trade for several tens of thousands of euros.[7]

Manufacturer performance: 220 km/h and 0 to 100 km/h in 7.5 seconds.[8][9]

Performance measured: 211 km/h, 0 to 100 in 9.1 seconds (Sport Auto).[10][11]

References

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  1. ^ "La BX 4 TC: Chronique d'une mésaventure". CitroRacing Historique (in French). Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  2. ^ Citroën Archived 7 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Group B Rally (1 January 1982). Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Citroën BX 4TC - Collector". L'Automobile Sportive, le guide des voitures de sport.
  4. ^ "essor de la marque fut très rapide". leroux.andre.free.fr.
  5. ^ "Citroën BX 4TC". 13 January 2022.
  6. ^ Gilboy, James (18 July 2019). "Found for Auction: One-of-62 Citroën BX 4TC Group B Rally Car in Unbelievable Condition". The Drive.
  7. ^ Newton, Andrew (4 November 2021). "Even Group B's biggest failure is now worth big money". Hagerty Media. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  8. ^ "Citroën BX 4TC (Group B)". Rally Group B Shrine. 18 January 2016.
  9. ^ "Citroën BX 4TC (1987). A Group B road car for sale in the United States". 15 January 2022.
  10. ^ "1986 Citroën BX 4TC". www.goodingco.com.
  11. ^ Skwarczek, Matthew (6 October 2021). "This Kooky Citroën BX 4TC Group B Rally Car Could Be Yours".
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