I love the Citroen 2CV and drove my mother's 2CV6 a bit around 1990.
I thought I'd have a go on this nice looking mod.
I noticed it is too quick revving and doesn't sound right.
My suggestion: it should be a boxer twin, not inline 4. And the other thing I remember was the relatively heavy flywheel compared with the engine size, so it took longer than most engines to rev up but you could get quite a bit of acceleration on letting out the clutch from a standstill. Top speed was slow but could reach about 70mph if I remember correctly.
Thanks a lot for the feedback Sure, it should be a 2cyl boxer, apparently I strangely messed up engine data when I was trying to make a better sound. I will try to fix both the number of cylinders and flywheel weight tomorrow. Unfortunately I am unable to find a way how to make the sound right.
I'm temporarily deaf in my left ear at the moment and it makes it hard to hear as the deafness is sort of loud, if that make any sense. I'm booked in to see the earwax removal person.
Anyway in the SHIFT+A editor I think I got a better result by reducing the "Collector MIX" and turning up "Header MIX" and I think maybe "Unevenness" isn't needed for this engine?
EDIT: My hearing is now restored after removal of large wax plugs. It'll take a day or two to get used to hearing so much, especially the high frequencies!
Thanks for the feedback, wrong engine data is fixed now About the sound, there are to many parameters to grasp, I have tried for a few hours and think that it is better now, but still off
Update: reworked engine and aerodynamics. The engine has a lower maximum torque and much heavier flywheel. Aerodynamics has a redefined center and body now includes a little lift. Default setups were fixed a little to prevent rolling the car. Minor roof cloth shading fixes. The engine sound was completely reworked. It is still off, but much better in comparison to previous mod versions.
Good to see the engine better, but it still revs too fast
I had a go at sound and came to a result that I find closer to the real thing, while still missing its distinctive "flute"tone