Lot 287: 1942 Peugeot VLV    
Estimate: 
$30,000-$40,000 US 
AUCTION DATE: 
To be auctioned on 
Friday, February 15, 2013 
OFFERED WITHOUT RESERVE 
An extraordinary, war-era, electric, “Light City Car.”

It is inconceivable from a modern viewpoint as to how difficult the years of 
the 
German Occupation of France were in the years 1940 to 1945. Gasoline was 
forbidden from the outset, as were rubber tires a year later. For drivers, the 
most coveted item was the “Ausweiss,” or permission-to-drive slip, yet a 
permitted driver was still subject to numerous inspections at stations or 
mobile 
patrols throughout the city.

Being resourceful people, the French dealt with their austerity in pragmatic 
terms. Human-powered vehicles like the Velocar were greatly in demand during 
this time. Some vehicles were converted to run on wood gas. This involved the 
burning of wood, coal, straw, or paper in a small furnace, usually towed behind 
on a trailer, whereupon the filtered and compressed gases could be pumped 
directly into the engine. France had about 65,000 “gazogene”-powered cars on 
the 
roads. Other cars were seen with compressed acetylene gas cylinders on the roof 
or mounted behind. Buses refilled their giant roof-mounted gas bags at 
“city-gas” stations.

Finally, there were the electrics. Many manufacturers, including large 
industrial firms like the aviation company Breguet, electrical equipment 
manufacturers like Mildé-Kriéger, or small car manufacturers like Georges Irat, 
had a go at making electric cars. Peugeot was the only one of the large car 
companies to build an electric model. It was called the VLV, or Voiture Légère 
de Ville, which means Light City Car.

Peugeot had been forced to turn its factories to war production for the Nazis, 
but the development office was buzzing with secret post-war projects. The VLV 
was produced overtly and described in the press. It was a small two-seater 
cabriolet with a folding roof and doors, incorporating side windows that were 
raised by a lever in the door. It was of revolutionary construction, a steel 
monocoque with only two reinforcing strips under the floor. Front suspension 
was 
by a transverse leaf spring, and the two rear wheels were only a foot apart, 
sharing a single brake drum. The electric motor was powered by four batteries 
under the front hood, totalling 48 volts and 82 amp-hour capacity. These 
constituted half of the 770 pound weight of the car.

Control was by conventional foot throttle, with full power available for hills 
when pushed to the floor. A forward/reverse lever changed motor direction. The 
normal speed was 20 mph, and the range was perhaps 50 miles, depending on 
terrain. This unrestored example is one of very few survivors of this 
well-engineered pioneer, and it features distinctive features in miniature, 
such 
as the boattail rear and the coupe-roadster style convertible top, which is a 
facsimile of the style of top used on large, luxurious 1930s cabriolets. 

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