This is a nearest to being back on the road - a 1996 Xantia Activa.

For those that don't know what it is, this is the ultimate in Citroen hydraulics. Not just self levelling dependant on weight, but fully active suspension so it stays completely level in corners (works by instead of having fixed drop links both sides of the anti-roll bar, one side of each roll bar is a computer controlled dual acting hydraulic ram).
This was bought in a pub car park, in the dark, with no V5 a good few years ago and I ran it for a couple of years until an ABS sensor went on it and the MOT came up.
The ABS sensor was a massively unpleasant job to change and when the weather turned crappy half way through the job a couple of years ago (along with discovering that the rear discs pads and calipers were knackered) I gave up and the car sat on bricks for about 2 years while the UKDM lude got the attention instead. And then I bought the JDM lude, so that delayed things further...
This shows part of the reason why the ABS sensor was such a complete sod.
The cable runs from the hub (bottom left) up the underneath of the trailing arm, around the bearing end of the trailing arm (inside the subframe) and squeezes through a hole in the top of the subframe above the top of the trailing arm (centre of the pic)


Then it squeezes out into a tiny gap between the subframe and the body shell.

It then runs along the top of the subframe to a plug that's completely impossible to see and virtually impossible to even feel with finger tips...
Anyway this October with the ludes pretty well advanced, I turned some attention back to the Activa.
How I'd left the brakes all that time ago.

Bit of rust protection

That's more like it


And the other side


Hooray! Back on its wheels and moved!!!

Hmmm... Certainly left its mark
