My mother loved her assorted Citroen's, from around 1955 till 1966, where she drove them solely. The suspension was great on the central African rutted tracks that were called roads, and they were great there. Servicing them as well was no problem, my father owned (the only) Citroen dealership, so every model year he would get a pile of brochures for the new model line delivered, as well as the most important thing needed to work on them, the assortment of service manuals and the special tools you needed. He might only sell 10 vehicles in that year, but the old ones still needed spares and support, plus he also had contracts for the mines for trucks.
One of his customers would send his car 400km by truck for service, as the alternative was to put it on a rail car, and send it though half of Africa to South Africa, where the other dealership was. Truck might take 3 or more days to make the trip, one way, from Belgian Congo to Northern Rhodesia.