The DF104 chassis was a revolutionary concept: a mounted ahead of the front axle but behind the transmission. Wait—longitudinal? In a small car?
Peugeot engineers visited the DF104 workshop. They saw the longitudinal engine, the flat floor, the structural firewall. Peugeot realized Renault had solved the packaging puzzle but failed the production test. renault df104
Renault, still reeling from the 1968 civil unrest and facing aging rear-engined models like the Renault 8 and 10, needed a modern voiture à vivre (a car for living). The directive from the Régie Nationale des Usines Renault was brutal: Create a car smaller than the R4, cheaper than the R6, but as spacious as a R16 inside. The DF104 chassis was a revolutionary concept: a
Note: The Renault DF104 is not a mass-production consumer vehicle. It is a specific, high-stakes prototype from the early 1970s that served as the mechanical and architectural mule for what would eventually become two of the most influential European cars of the decade: the Renault 5 (R5) and the Peugeot 104. 1. Genesis: The Post-68 Automotive Revolution By 1969, the European automotive landscape was shifting. The Mini had proven that maximum interior space could be wrestled from a minimal footprint, but its transverse engine, gearbox-in-sump layout was idiosyncratic and expensive to cool. The Fiat 127 (1971) was on the horizon, threatening to redefine the A-segment with a transverse engine and efficient use of space. Peugeot engineers visited the DF104 workshop
The man tasked with this impossible geometry was , a young engineer who had worked on the R16. His solution became Project 104 . 2. The DF104: The Mechanical Mule Before the styling clay or the marketing plans, there was the DF104 —a codename standing for Direction des Fabrications / 104th project . This was not a car for the public; it was a rolling test bed.