205 GTI/CTI The 1.6 litre GTI was launched in 1984, and came with a
XU5J engine, producing , for the 1987 model year the XU5J received the
cylinder head with larger
valves thus becoming XU5JA. The new engine was quoted for . The 1.9 litre GTI came with an XU9JA engine producing , although later models with a
catalytic converter produce . Internally these engines are very similar, the main differences on 1.9 litre versions being the longer stroke, oil cooler, and some parts of the fuel injection system. The shorter stroke 1.6 litre engine is famed for being revvy and eager, while the 1.9 litre feels lazier and torquier. Outside the engine bay the main differences between the 1.6 GTI and the 1.9 GTI are half-leather seats (1.9 GTI) vs. cloth seats (1.6 GTI); and
disc brakes all-round (1.9 GTI) vs. discs at the front and
drum brakes at the back (1.6 GTI); as well as the 14" alloy (Speedline SL201) wheels (1.6 GTI) vs. 15" (Speedline SL299) alloys (1.9 GTI). The 205 is still often treated as a benchmark in group car tests of the newest GTI models or equivalent. Peugeot itself has never truly recreated this success in future GTI models, although they came very close with the highly regarded GTI-6 variant of the
Peugeot 306. A
cabriolet version of the 205, known as the CJ/CT/CTI, was designed and partially assembled by
Pininfarina of Italy. The CTI version offered the same plastic arches and wheels as the 1.6 GTI. Some later models incorporated the catalysed 1.9-litre engine. The main aesthetic difference between the GTI/CTi versions and other 205 models were the plastic wheel arches and trim, beefier front and rear bumper valances. The shell also underwent some minor changes, including larger wheel arches (to suit the larger wheels on the GTI and CTi), and the suspension was redesigned and sat lower on the GTI with stiffer springs, different wishbones and a drop-linked
anti-roll bar. With the early success of the 205 GTI in Europe,
Motor Trend reported in 1984 that Peugeot was seriously considering adding it to its US lineup, even though Peugeot had a more upmarket image in the United States. Nothing ever came of such rumours, however, and any talk of Peugeot expanding its presence in US became moot when the company was forced to pull out in 1991. Sales of the GTI in the United Kingdom in the early 1990s were badly hit by soaring insurance premiums, brought about by high theft and 'joyriding' of cars of this sort. Increasingly stringent emissions regulations meant the 1.6 GTI went out of production in 1992, while the 1.9-litre was sold for a couple more years thanks to re-engineering of the engine to enable it to work properly with a
catalytic converter, which dropped power to . In October 2020 Peugeot announced that their heritage brand "l'Aventure Peugeot" would make a factory restoration program for the 205 GTI available in 2021 as part of the company's 210th anniversary celebration. This program is intended to be expanded to other Peugeot (and possibly Citroën) models later, but will begin with the 205 GTI as it is one of the most desirable Peugeot built that is also available in large numbers. The cars will be restored to as-new condition, with certain no longer available parts being made on 3D-printers.), and came equipped with all available vendor options at that time except air-conditioning, but including full black leather interior,
ABS, power steering and sunroof. 1652 Griffes were made, all in laser green and with grey alloy wheels with a silver rim. The 1FM was produced for the UK market in 1992 to coincide with the 25th birthday of
BBC Radio 1. Only 25 were made and each car was individually numbered with a small brass plate. The car was black with 'Radio 1FM 25th' bodywork decals, grey Speedline alloy wheels and came with all options fitted as standard, including ABS, air conditioning, full leather interior, remote central locking, catalytic converter and power steering. A bespoke stereo system including a CD changer, CD head unit, amplifier, uprated door speakers and an acoustic rear shelf containing 200W 6x9 speakers was specified by Clarion. One was raffled at a Radio 1 event, and Radio 1 ran a competition on air to win one.
205 STDT In 1993 Peugeot introduced the 205 and 405 STDT, higher performance diesel models that offered some of the GTI's sporting qualities in the diesel engined part of the range. The 205 STDT (special trim diesel turbo) was available only in the 3-door bodyshell with a 1,769 cc turbo diesel engine (XUD7 T/K) with the trim and luxuries of the 205 GTI. The car was initially marketed towards executives, with soft cloth bucket seats in Beige with matching carpet and dashboard, as also found in the Gentry models. The car featured PAS, central locking, electric windows and also electrically heated mirrors. Many were fitted with a large, vacuum-seal slide sunroof. The brochure specification from 1993 on the STDT lists its equipment as: • 1769cc, 78 bhp turbo diesel engine • 5-speed manual gearbox • Power steering • Alloy wheels (different from the GTI models) • Bodyside mouldings, wheelarch finishers and bumper inserts (chrome inserts) • Long range driving lamps • Optional sliding sunroof • Heated door mirrors • Choice of body colours: Aztec Gold; Oberon Green; Steel Grey • Sports front seats, velour trim • 50/50 split rear seats • Leather-trimmed sports steering wheel • Remote control central locking (base models were not remote control, running off the key only) • Electric front windows • Tinted glass • Clarion 97001F digital stereo radio/stereo cassette with 4 speakers • Lockable glove box with lamp Its performance data is defined in the brochure from 1993 as: • Maximum speed: • Acceleration 0–100 km/h (62 mph): 12.2 seconds, 0–1000 m: 34.2 seconds. • Fuel consumption – mpg (L/100 km): constant driving speed 56 mph (90 km/h) – 61.4 (4.6); 75 mph (120 km/h) – 40.9 (6.9); simulated urban driving – 42.8 (6.6) The 205 STDT is only found in three colours; Oberon Green, Steel Grey and Aztec Gold. Production of the car was approximately one year between 1993 and 1994. As of the fourth quarter of 2024, there were reportedly only 15 STDTs left on the roads and 152 SORN in the UK.
205 Rallye From 1988 to 1992, Peugeot produced another variant of the 205, the 205 Rallye, which was engineered and produced by
Peugeot–Talbot sport. This edition of the 205 was positioned as a cost-effective alternative to the 205 GTI, retaining its sporty character, but being less expensive to buy or maintain. To achieve this, Peugeot used a derivative of the
TU-series engine used in the post-1987 205s, which was designated
TU24. The engine is essentially the same engine as was in the 1.1-litre 205 with the cylinders bored out to a total engine displacement of 1294 cc, a sports camshaft and twin
Weber carburetors. The 1.3-litre engine produced at 6,800 rpm. The car got the 1.6 GTI front suspension with ventilated brake discs, and the 1.6 GTI rear axle with drum brakes. The 205 Rallye was stripped of almost all soundproofing, electrical systems or other luxury items, bringing down the weight to no more than . Peugeot expected to build around 5000 Rallyes. In the end 30,111 Rallyes were produced, even though they were only sold in certain mainland European markets (including France, Belgium, Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and the Netherlands). The distinctive aesthetic features of the 205 Rallye include the squarer wheel arches (which are different from GTI arches), the steel body-coloured wheels and the rainbow-coloured Peugeot-Talbot sport decals on the front grille and the tailgate. They were only available in white. The Rallye was sold with a reduced-weight interior with the Peugeot-Talbot sport logo embroidered in the front seats. From 1990 to 1992, Peugeot also built a 1.9 litre version of the 205 Rallye. Only about 1000 examples were produced and they were only sold in Germany, because the 1.3 litre version did not meet German road regulations. The 1.9 Rallye is just a 1.9 GTI with the Rallye bodyshell and the new-style clear indicators and rear light units. Although they are even rarer than the 1.3 Rallye, they are less popular among Peugeot enthusiasts, because they lack the raw and spartan character of the 1.3 Rallye and are heavier. In 1992, Peugeot introduced the Rallye to the UK market, it was available in three colours (500 white, 250 yellow, 80 blue) and was essentially a re-badged XT. It came equipped with black cloth seats embroidered with the Peugeot-Talbot Sport logo, the Peugeot-Talbot sports colours behind the front arches and over the back arches, as well as the same markings on the grill and tailgate of its European brother. It was powered by an iron-blocked 1360 cc TU3.2 engine with the same twin-choke Solex carburettor found on the earlier XS engine. It produced and achieved with a 0–60 mph time of 11.7 seconds. After the 205 Rallye, Peugeot again used the 'Rallye' designation for some of its 106 and 306 models.
205 Turbo 16 (T16) To
homologate the 205 T16 ("Turbo 16" in France)
Group B rally car, Peugeot had to produce 200 road-going examples. According to the
Group B regulations, these had to be based on a current production road car. Peugeot decided to base the Group B rally car on the two door version of the 205. The body was built by
Heuliez, where standard three door bodyshells from the production line were delivered and heavily modified. Heuliez cut off the complete rear of the car and welded in a transverse firewall between the B-posts. The rear frame was then built in a mixture of sheet steel profiles and tubes. The front was modified in a similar way with a tube frame carrying the front suspension. The completed bodies were delivered to Simca (Talbot) for the 200-series production cars and to Peugeot Talbot Sport for the competition versions. The engine, based on the cast iron block of the diesel version of the then new XU engine family, albeit with a specially developed 16-valve head, was moved from the front of the vehicle to the rear, transforming it from a front-engine, front-wheel-drive to a rear-mid engine four-wheel-drive automobile. The gearbox came from the
Citroën SM but was mounted transversely. The car had all wheel drive. All street versions (VINs P1 to P200) were left hand drive and identically kitted out in dark grey colour, except the first (VIN P1) that was painted white and carried all the competition cars' decoration for demonstration purposes. The competition cars of the first evolution series (VIN C1 to C20) were built at the sport department Peugeot Talbot Sport and presented to the public at the same day as the standard street version. Later competition vehicles of the Evolution 2 series (VIN C201 to C220) were built differently as the rear spaceframe had no more sheet steel profiles in it but was composed entirely of tubes. Apart from the appearance, the road variants had practically nothing in common with the regular production model. They shared the with a
bore ×
stroke of
transversely-mounted,
mid-engine, four-wheel-drive layout of the rally car. It did, however, have less than half the power at around at 6,750 rpm and of
torque at 4,000 rpm. The T was for (
KKK)
Turbo, fuel fed by
Bosch K-Jetronic fuel injection and a
compression ratio of 6.5:1; the 16 stands for
DOHC 16
valves. Outwardly similar to a normal 205, the T16 had wider wheel arches, and the whole rear section lifted up to give access to the engine. Underneath, the complex
drivetrain from the rally car was kept to abide by the Group B rules. In addition to the Group B model, the lesser 205 GTI was also
FIA approved for competition in the
Group N and
Group A categories.
Peugeot Talbot Sport's factory 205 T16s under
Jean Todt were the most successful cars to compete in the last two years of the
World Rally Championship's Group B era, winning the
1985 and
1986 Constructors' and
Drivers' titles with
Timo Salonen and
Juha Kankkunen respectively against such notable competition from
Audi,
Lancia and
Ford, with an Evolution 2 model being introduced for the latter of those two seasons. The chassis and engine from this model would later underpin the
Peugeot Quasar concept car. == Electric prototype ==