Peugeot decided to show the quality of the Type 3 by running a demonstration model alongside the cyclists in the inaugural
Paris–Brest–Paris cycle race in September 1891, thus gaining official confirmation of progress from the race marshals and time-keepers. His chief engineer Louis Rigoulot and rising workshop foreman
Auguste Doriot proved the robustness of the design, as this demonstration car ran for , from Peugeot's factory in
Valentigney to Paris, over the race course, and then back to Valentigney, at an average speed of , without major malfunctions. This was the longest run to that time by a petrol-powered vehicle and about four times as far as the previous record set by
Léon Serpollet from Paris to Lyon. The demonstrator became the first Peugeot sold to the public. A lightened Type 3 was entered into the
Paris–Bordeaux–Paris race in June 1895, finishing second and maintaining an average speed of . ==Italian production==