Scrapyard Gem: 2006 Peugeot 307 CC
YORK, England — Peugeot claims to have invented the retractable hardtop convertible with the 1934 Peugeot 401 Eclipse Décapotable, decades before Ford created the Fairlane 500 Skyliner. Fast-forward to 2000, when Peugeot began selling the 206 CC, a sporty version of the 206 subcompact with hardtop roof that folded into the trunk. A couple of years later, the innovative French manufacturer followed up with the 307 CC, based on the larger 307 compact. Right-hand-drive versions were created for sale across the Channel, and I’ve found this 2006 model in a self-service breaker’s yard in York, England.
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U-Pull-It York boasts an excellent selection of discarded French machinery; in fact, the section for Renaults, Peugeots and Citroëns is the biggest in the facility. So far, I’ve documented just today’s Junkyard Scrapyard Gem plus a 2010 Peugeot Bipper from the French section of that yard, but there are many more to come.
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This car is a 2.0 Sport, which had an MSRP of £20,945 in the United Kingdom (about £34,642 in 2024 pounds, or $43,763 in 2024 dollars).
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It has a 2.0-liter DOHC engine rated at 175 horsepower, which was good power for a car weighing just over 3,000 pounds.
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The transmission is a five-speed manual.
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The 307 CC was quite a bit more expensive than the tiny 206 CC and GM’s retracting-hardtop rival for Europe: the Opel/Vauxhall Tigra TwinTop.
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It would be fun to have one of these in the United States, though a left-hand-drive one from the Continent would be easier to deal with on our roads. You’ll be able to import one legally in 2027!
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The Wall’s Funny Feet car air freshener is a retro design inspired by foot-shaped ice cream bars that were popular in 1980s Britain. There are always new bits of history to discover in a junkyard scrapyard!
Buy one and you’ll be beautiful and adventurous.
You might not be able to fry an egg on the decklid in France.

