Rare Rides featured the no-nonsense sedan version of the 504 some time ago, an example which was the same model year as today’s cabriolet. But while the sedan 504 was targeted to the no-nonsense family car buyer, the cabriolet was considerably more upmarket.
Come along as we learn some more about the most exciting version of Peugeot’s long-lived 504.
The 504 was introduced in 1968 as a replacement for the notoriously reliable 404. There was quite a bit of overlap in 404 and 504 production, as the 404 remained in production through 1975 in the European market, 1980 in South America, and 1991 in Kenya.
At its debut, the rear-drive 504 was available only in sedan guise. Its initial launch was delayed due to general upheaval in France in politics and production circa spring of 1968. The car’s launch was delayed until the fall, at which point the 504 started winning awards and praise for generally all of its characteristics.
The next bodies to debut were the coupe and cabriolet versions, introduced in spring 1969 at Geneva. The initial 1.8-liter gasoline engines in two-door 504s made the same 79 horsepower as in the sedan, but had a revised drive ratio to give a higher road speed at low RPMs. All two-door examples had injection as standard, where it was optional at sedan level.
504’s range expanded in 1970 to include a wagon (Break) and a pickup truck. Engines changed too, where base engine was a new 2.0-liter inline-four good for 96 horses, or 105 if fuel injected. Another diesel also appeared, which at 2.1 liters was larger than the initial 1.8 (which remained available). Ford later purchased the 2.1 diesel for use in the European Granada, because it couldn’t be bothered to develop its own.
More engine changes occurred in 1974 with the debut of an all-new high-tech PRV V6, the jointly-developed engine from the good people at Peugeot, Renault, and Volvo. 2.7 liters in displacement, the innovative engine put out 136 horsepower, and increased top speed to 116 miles per hour. The V6 was limited in availability to the more expensive coupe and cabriolet, and replaced all four-cylinder power in those examples. The exclusivity and high price was short-lived though, as in 1978 four-pot engines returned to coupe and cabriolet per customer demand.
French 504 production slowed down after 1979 as the 505 was ready to replace it, but trickled through 1983. Elsewhere, Argentina enjoyed 504 through 1999, Kenya until 2004, and Nigeria until 2006. A nice, tidy run of 38 years for the 504.
It’s from the V6 era which today’s Rare Ride hails. Brown over tan, the five-speed manual cabriolet wears its Pininfarina badges proudly, and features a luxurious interior with plenty of burled wood. Four people can ride in exclusive 504 cabriolet comfort for $84,000.
[Images: Peugeot]
Lovely!
It’s unusual for a car to look good from every angle, but this is one of them.
Great find!
This kind of blows my mind.
Growing up partly in Europe in the ’80s, I think of a Peugeot 504 as a tough but workaday sedan with ungainly proportions, kind of like the equivalent of a ten-year-old Camry today. Seeing it in this light as a very successful object of beauty is like seeing the friendly but totally mousy girl in your class get a professional makeover and turn into a bombshell.
504 glow up
This is kind of how I now feel about Corvairs and Karmann Ghias. They were always around when I was a kid, but I had categorized them as weird or uncool – maybe because they were rear-engined, maybe because they were lacking the horsepower of the muscle cars I obsessed over. In any event, seeing one now really makes me happy.
Shapely and seductive, but can I have it for less than $84,000?
Ohh probably.
I’m thinking like, $4,800 or thereabouts.
How about a nice 2001 Camaro instead for sir.
From what I can see, there’s no radio – just holes in the center stack, for the dial and the shafts. The dealer looks like an interesting place – I see a couple of Citroen-Maserati SMs in the background, and an OG Mini.
Beautiful and VERY much like the Fiat 124 Spider, practically a knock off.
Both are Pinninfarina and came out about the same time (1968 was 1st 124), so maybe 124/504 was a bit of a Miata/Fiata situation.
Absolutely gorgeous. They just don’t make cars this beautiful anymore.
Low beltline, upright windshield with a skinny frame, is how a ‘vert should be done. Gives a much more immersive open top experience, than having the beltline at eye-height and a steeply raked windshield whose massive frame extends almost over the driver’s head (Or into his forehead…)
PRV V6 engines has bad reputation (head and cam problems where quit common). Later ones, specially fuel injection models are much better, still parts are very costly and there is lack some engine parts.
PRV V6 engine was developed jointly by Peugeot, Renault and Volvo. It was widely used in french cars, Alpine, Talbot, Citroen XM and most common cars like Renault 25/30, Peugeot 604/605 and Volvo 260/760 -series. And do not forget DeLorean. PRV V6 manufacturer was in France “Française de Mécanique” -company. Engine was in production 1974-1998.
I remember that early on, the PRV in the Peugeot 604 didn’t use fuel injection, but instead a one-barrel carb as the primary carb, and a separate two-barrel as the secondary.
Peugeot 604 TI which comes late 1977 use Bosch K-Jetronic fuel injection.
I’ve long been a fan of these (it’s a shame we never got them in the US), and others mentioned, there’s a definite resemblance to Pininfarina’s Fiat 124 Sport and 124 Spyder designs. I’d take one of each of the earlier examples, before the PRV V6 came along.