Incredible: Emile Leray built a working motorbike from a broken down car to escape the African desert

Paul Pinkerton
Credit: Emile Leray
Credit: Emile Leray

‘I put myself in what one calls survival mode. I could not have gone back on foot – it was too far.’

A Frenchman has found fame over 20 years later after pulling off a remarkable escape from the Moroccan desert – by building a motorbike just using parts from his crashed car.

His amazing escape from the barren terrain saw Mr Leray single handedly rebuild his Citreon into a makeshift motorbike, in a dramatic escape which has seen him dubbed the most ‘extreme’ mechanic in the world.

In 1993 Emile Leray, then a 43-year-old former electrician, decided to go on an adventure and drive his Citroen 2CV from the city of Tan Ta and cross the Moroccan desert.

French Mad Max transformed his 2CV into a bike. source
French Mad Max transformed his 2CV into a bike. Daniel Denis of 2CV magazine

However, not all went according to plan. After going off road Emile crashed his car and was left stranded in the middle of nowhere. Deciding that he wouldn’t make it out of the desert on foot, Emile decided to build a makeshift motorbike using parts from his now wrecked car.

He had enough supplies of food and water to last him around ten days. After carefully considering all the mechanical and physical hurdles he would have to get over, Emile starts work on his DIY motorbike, the next morning.

He starts taking apart his Citroen, by removing the body, he used that as a shelter against the sandstorms. Working under the scorching sun in a shirt with short sleeves, he makes his own sleeves out of a pair of socks, and keeps working away on his ‘bike’.

His amazing makeshift motorbike allowed Mr Leray to travel to civilisation, where he was rescued by police. source
His amazing makeshift motorbike allowed Mr Leray to travel to civilisation, where he was rescued by police. Daniel Denis of 2CV magazine

His ingenious engineering saw him convert the car’s rear bumper into a rudimentary seat, shorten the chassis, and place the engine and gearbox in the middle to create a vehicle which somehow kept going long enough to transport him to safety.

But it’s the 2CV transmission that’s truly surprising – a drum drives the rear wheel by friction, and the laws of physics force Emile to drive it only in reverse.

It seems almost impossible for someone to build a motorbike in the middle of the nowhere, in the middle of the desert. With no power tools, just a few basic tools, and no drills, blowtorches or welding equipment. But Emile Leray created his two-wheeler only by screwing the parts together.

Mr Leray, now 62, has kept the motorbike as a memento of his incredible escape from the Moroccan desert. source
Mr Leray, now 62, has kept the motorbike as a memento of his incredible escape from the Moroccan desert.Daniel Denis of 2CV magazine. Credit: Emile Leray

The adventurer, and now a survivor  began work on his unique project thinking he would complete it in three days time, but it took him three times as long and only succeeded after twelve days of hard work. With only 1/2 litre of water left, he started to ride his motorbike out of the desert.

After a day of riding Emile was picked up by the Moroccan police force who took him to the nearest village. They also handed him a big fine because the registration documents for his car no longer corresponded to what he was driving – his car, bike thing.

Although his story appeared in brief on French television in the 1990s, Mr Leray did not publicise his exploits, and they only recently emerged again after appearing on a motoring website. Mr Leray, is living in northwest France.

jack-beckett

jack-beckett is one of the authors writing for Outdoor Revival