The Simca Ariane is a large
saloon car launched in April 1957 by the French
automaker Simca and manufactured in
the company's factory at
Poissy until 1963.
Origins
The plant at Poissy had been built by
Ford France
France (), officially the French Republic ( ), is a country primarily located in Western Europe. It also comprises of Overseas France, overseas regions and territories in the Americas and the Atlantic Ocean, Atlantic, Pacific Ocean, Pac ...
between 1937 and 1940, but after the
war the economic direction of France was uncertain. Ford had equipped the plant to produce the V8 engined
Ford Vedette but the government was imposing punitive levels of car tax on cars with large engines and sales fell well short of expectations. In addition, the Poissy plant experienced above average levels of industrial unrest.
Simca purchased the plant from Ford in 1954, together with rights to build the latest version of the car produced in it, which now became the
Simca Vedette, relaunched by Simca with different model names according to equipment levels.
The
Simca Vedette competed in France's large car market at a time when the economy was finally returning to growth, and enjoyed moderate success with their fashionably American style finished off by an Italian designer called
Rapi. In 1954 the big Simcas competed in France against the
Citroën Traction which was still popular despite its twenty-year-old design and the
Renault Frégate which struggled to find buyers thanks to a poor mechanical reputation and, it was suggested, from the reluctance of France's
haute-bourgeoisie to buy a big expensive car from a state owned enterprise.
The
Suez Crisis
The Suez Crisis, or the Second Arab–Israeli war, also called the Tripartite Aggression ( ar, العدوان الثلاثي, Al-ʿUdwān aṯ-Ṯulāṯiyy) in the Arab world and the Sinai War in Israel,Also known as the Suez War or 1956 Wa ...
of October 1956 was a catalyst that undermined the position of the V8 Simcas, however, due to the fuel shortages and price increases that it triggered. By this time domestic competition was in any case much intensified by the arrival of the
Citroen DS which, despite getting off to a slow start, and despite being stuck with an engine design that had changed little since the 1930s, now became increasingly dominant in France's market for large family cars.
It was often asserted that the Simca Ariane's launch was a direct result of the Suez Crisis, but it is now clear that by 1956 Simca's project for a big car with a little engine ''("une grande voiture à petit moteur")'' had already existed for several years. The urgency of the project was increased in the summer of 1956 when the
Simca chief learned of a dastardly plan by
Paul Ramadier, the Minister for Economy and Finance, and a still influential former prime minister, to introduce in December 1956 an additional savage annual car tax for owners of cars with larger engines.
The Suez crisis simply built on the economic case for a small engined version of the car, and Simca was therefore ready to respond very nimbly to the changed circumstances created by the crisis, fitting a 1290cc "Flash" series engine from their successful
small family car, the
Aronde, into the most basic version of their V8 engined Simca Trianon, which was one of the models in the
Vedette range. The new car was badged as the "Simca Ariane" and was soon available in several versions.
The car
Fitting the body of the former first-generation
Simca Vedette with a 1290cc (7CV) ''Flash''
four cylinder
The engine configuration describes the fundamental operating principles by which internal combustion engines are categorized.
Piston engines are often categorized by their cylinder layout, valves and camshafts. Wankel engines are often categorize ...
engine from the much smaller
Simca Aronde produced a car that focused on economy rather than speedy acceleration. Presented in April 1957, the Ariane filled the gap between Aronde and Vedette. In October of the same year, the Ariane 8 was presented - a version powered by the same ''
Aquillon'' 2351 cc (13CV)
V-eight-cylinder unit that powered the Vedette. The Ariane 8 effectively replaced the former Simca Trianon, which was a bottom-of-the-range Vedette, as the Vedette range was moved upmarket. The Ariane 8 would be discontinued along with the company's other V8 powered models in 1961, however.
For the 1959 model year the company introduced an Ariane Super Luxe with increased levels of chrome trim on the outside as well as vanity mirrors on the inside and a windscreen washer to help the view out. All the Arianes also received restyled tail light clusters at this point which resembled those already used on the more flamboyantly styled but broadly similar Vedette models. Further upgrades to the interior trim were implemented for 1961, and newly available options included bench seats that could now be folded flat to form a double bed of sorts.
[ There followed yet another new name: for the final two years of its life the Ariane was branded as the Simca Miramas.][
]
Commercial
The Ariane was manufactured until 1963, with 166,363 produced.[ ''(published and distributed privately, no ISBN)''] Towards the end, production slowed strikingly. 33,733 Arianes were produced in 1961, which slumped to just 14,284 during 1962.[ By this time attention at the company's Poissy plant had switched to the new Simca 1000. The most direct replacement for the Simca Ariane/Miramas would be the Simca 1300/1500, introduced in 1963.
]
Argentina
The Ariane Miramas, were made in Argentina by Metalmecánica. Approx. 507 units built until 1967 in two versions: "Std" and "Lujo".
External links
Ariane history at RitzSite
References
{{Simca timeline
Ariane
Ariane may refer to:
*Ariana (name), also Ariane, Arianne
Arts
* ''Ariane'' (Martinů), an opera by Bohuslav Martinů, first performed 1961
* ''Ariane'' (Massenet), an opera by Jules Massenet, first performed 1906
* ''Ariane'' (film), a 1931 ...
1960s cars
Cars introduced in 1957