Char G1

Char G1
Char G1
France-RenaultG1R.jpg
Renault Char G1R mock-up in its second phase, as a 30 tonne tank
Type Tank
Place of origin  France
Specifications
Weight 20 metric tons
Length unspecified
Width unspecified
Height unspecified
Crew unspecified

Armor 60 mm
Main
armament
high velocity gun
Secondary
armament
two machine guns
Engine unspecified
unspecified
Power/weight unspecified
Suspension unspecified
Operational
range
200 km
Speed 40 km/h

The Char G1 was a French replacement project for the Char D2 medium tank. Several prototypes from different companies were developed since 1936, but not a single one had been fully completed at the time of the Fall of France in 1940. The projects represented some of the most advanced French tank design of the period and finally envisaged a type that would have been roughly equal in armament and mobility to later World War II standard tanks of other nations, such as the Soviet T-34 and the American M4 Sherman, but possessing several novel features, such as gun stabilisation, a semi-automatic loader and an optical rangefinder.

Contents

Development

The twenty tonne tank

By 1935 the French Infantry had not yet developed a satisfactory medium tank. Whereas a reasonably effective heavy break-through tank was available, the Char B1, and several light infantry support tanks were on the brink of being taken into production — the Renault R35, Hotchkiss H35 and the FCM 36 — a good medium tank had still to be designed, as the Char D1 was a manifest failure and the Char D2 only a slight improvement over its ancestor.[1] Such a medium tank was needed in a minimal number of 250 to serve in the planned organic tank battalion of the five Mechanised Infantry Divisions, the main Infantry force capable of executing strategic offensive or defensive movements.[2] A good medium tank was already under development by the French Cavalry, the SOMUA S35, but the Infantry rejected this type, both because of technological reasons — its climbing capacity was limited — and because it wanted to assert its dominance over the Cavalry in the field of tank design.[3]

On 18 December 1935 the first specifications were issued by the Infantry of a Char Moyen d'Infanterie de 20 tonnes ("twenty tonne medium infantry tank"). They called for a tank with a road speed of 50 km/h, an off-road speed of 20 km/h, a range of 400 kilometres, a trench crossing capacity of two metres, a wading capacity of 120 centimetres, a climbing capacity of eighty centimetres and 45° slope, a 47 mm gun and 7.5 mm machine-gun, an armour thickness of 40 mm, a gas-proof hull and the possession of a radio set. The weight limit of twenty metric tonnes was chosen because of railroad, bridge carrying and pontoon constraints. Overall these features are close to those of the SOMUA S35.[4]

New specifications

In May 1936 the Conseil Consultatif de l'Armement accordingly decided that French industry be invited to initiate studies on the design of a tank having sufficient protection and armament to fight other armour, but light enough (twenty tons or less) to be both cheap and mobile.[1] However, during this period it began to be increasingly realised that the Char B1 was overly complex and expensive and two tonnes heavier than necessary because of using riveted armour plate instead of cast or welded armour. The twenty tonne tank would be lighter, swifter, cheaper, more easily produced and require less training. It is therefore also decided that the new twenty tonne tank should be able to serve as a future battle tank, eventually replacing the older heavy tank.[5]

In October a special commission revealed to the French industry the changed specifications for the "twenty tonne tank": a maximum speed of at least 40 km/h; a range of 200 km; a protection level equal to that of the Char B1 bis (i.e. 60 mm all around); a trench crossing capacity of 250 cm; a complete protection against gas attack; the dimensions should not impede rail transport and the armament should consist of a high velocity gun capable of destroying all expected enemy medium tanks, combined with two machine guns.[6]

The specifications implied that the vehicle would have been the most potent and modern French tank yet developed. It also entailed that its introduction would not take place in the near future, as it was simply too advanced. This way it was avoided that a decision would have to be reached about the future course the Infantry tank weapon should take. At the time there were officers, like Charles de Gaulle, who proposed that the Infantry raise armoured divisions that were similar in organisation to the Divisions Légères Mécaniques of the French Cavalry or the German Panzerdivisionen, i.e. balanced forces with much organic mechanised infantry and motorised artillery, that would be flexible enough to fulfil all possible tactical roles. Other officers however considered it redundant to imitate the Cavalry and thought the Infantry should stick to its proper task: the break-through only. Some of them wanted that the money to be spent on armoured divisions would go to the production of a sufficient number of light infantry tanks to give each division its own organic battalion, as the best way to ensure an effective execution of combined arms tactics. Some wanted only heavy tanks to be built. The Char G, mobile, but heavily armoured enough to function as a break-through tank, made only sense if German-style armoured divisions would be created and a definite decision about its production could only be made when the debate had produced a clear winner.

Despite this uncertainty about its future the project generated enormous interest among French industrialists, as it had a real potential to become France's main AFV building programme, leading to large state investments the French industry badly needed during the period of the Great Depression. Late 1936 and early 1937 seven companies submitted plans: Baudet-Donon-Roussel; FCM; Fouga; Lorraine de Dietrich; Renault; SEAM and SOMUA.[6] One company, Batignolles, announced a plan, but did not actually submit one.[7]

The commission on 20 February 1937 issued its reports on each proposal. For two of these this report forms our main source of information because they would be discontinued within a year: the SOMUA design resembled a cross between the SOMUA S40 and the Sau 40 self-propelled gun; it was basically a SOMUA S35 with better climbing capacity. Of the FCM design no details are known but it seemed to have had the general outline of the FCM 36, though with its dimensions about 20% larger and equipped with a FCM F4 fortification turret.[8]

Of the other proposals, those of Baudet-Donon-Roussel, Fouga and Lorraine de Dietrich were being kept under consideration until further information could be provided about their feasibility. The SEAM and Renault projects were sufficiently advanced to approve the construction of a prototype of each. The last two firms' good contacts with the French military had allowed them to begin design work even before the specifications were officially revealed. In Renault's case this advantage had turned into a disadvantage when in November it had been decided that a hull-based 75 mm main armament was to be preferred on instigation of Prince André Poniatowski, head of a design bureau subcontracted by SEAM, whose proposal unsurprisingly had this feature. The SEAM prototype was to be delivered before 31 October 1937 at a price of 1.2 million French franc, twenty percent of which was advanced by the State.[9]

The new demand for a 75 mm gun in the hull posed many problems for most contenders as in their first designs no room had been provided to mount such a large weapon; it would likely add a mass of two tonnes. The requirement for an 50% increase in armour protection caused another two tonne weight raise. All designs on 20 February 1937 failed to meet the original twenty tonne weight limit and were projected at 23-25 tonnes.[5]

Char G1

Renault's tank could easily be adopted however, to hold a 75 mm gun in the turret. In 1936 he proposed this as an alternative — and this was well received. Encouraged by this, in 1937 he retook the initiative from Poniatowski by through an intermediary bribing a high-ranking officer of the Direction de l'Infanterie; the latter again manipulated the commission to change the design policy.[10] He convinced the commission that a 75 mm gun in the turret should be, not a mere option, but mandatory. This gave Renault an enormous advantage over all his rivals who now were forced to completely redesign their projects, leading to inevitable large and, as Renault hoped, perhaps fatal delays.[11]

Late 1937 the project had been renamed Char G1 and all prototypes then authorised had received an official designation: Lorraine: G1L; Renault: G1R; Baudet Donon Rousel: G1B, Fouga: G1F and SEAM: G1P. The SOMUA and FCM projects were discontinued for being too vague or lacking innovation; also the production capacity of these two companies had already been directed to the manufacture of other types.

On 1 February 1938 the Direction de l'Infanterie issued new specifications, the third major change in the project concept: a maximum weight increased to 35 tonnes, necessitated by the fitting of a Long 32 75 mm gun in a turret.[9]

These new demands caused most companies to slow the design process: they were unwilling to invest much money in an ever more complex system, with uncertain prospects. Therefore the French government ordered on 8 June 1938 that ARL military engineer Maurice Lavirotte be detached to guide their efforts, in order to speed the proceedings; if the companies could not obtain armour plate, they should be allowed to use boiler plate to construct prototypes.[12] At that moment Renault was unable to give any indication about a possible production date; the Fouga and BDR projects seemed to become prohibitively heavy; SEAM thought to be able to commence manufacture in the middle of 1940 and Lorraine in 1941.[13]

On 12 July 1938 a much more detailed list of specifications was given. In general they called for a tank that is powerfully armed, immune to standard anti-tank guns and possessing an excellent tactical and strategic mobility. In detail they demanded a long high velocity semi-automatic 75 mm main armament; a 7.5mm machine-gun in the turret that can also serve as an AA-weapon; a machine-gun in the front of the hull or the turret; a minimal ammunition load of a hundred rounds for the gun and thirty magazines for the machine-gun; an empty weight of thirty and a combat weight of thirty-two tonnes. The engine should be able to be both electrically and manually started; the tracks should be fully accessible. A maximum speed is demanded of 40 km/h (average 30 km/h) on the road and 20 km/h off-road; two fuel tanks should allow a range of two hundred kilometres or eight hours off-road. The climbing capacity is determined at ninety centimetres and 85% on a solid or 65% on a wet slope; the trench-crossing capacity at 250 centimetres and the wading capacity at 120 centimetres. For the first time also dimensional limits are given: the width should not exceed 294 centimetres to facilitate rail transport,[14] the absolute height of the fighting compartment should not exceed 120 cm, but yet be sufficient to hold a side-door.[15]

As regards the gas-tight armour, the demanded thickness remains at sixty millimetres but it is forbidden to use an appliqué armour. The armour could be cast — with the sections connected by bolts or, preferably, gudgeons — or electrically welded. Automatic fire-extinguishers should be present.[15]

The crew should have advanced vision and fire-control equipment. The cupola, armed with the secondary 7.5 mm machine gun, should have a large episcope to which the main turret is slaved, allowing the commander to lay the 75 mm gun on the target himself — which is very desirable as he doubles as gunner. The cupola should also be fitted with an optical telemetric rangefinder. The gun is a Long 32 75 mm gun, providing, despite its limited elongation compared to foreign weapons, a good muzzle velocity through the use of Brandt tungsten armour-piercing subcalibre ammunition.[16]

None of the projects in the summer of 1938 could meet these specifications without a fundamental redesign.[14]

Char G1P

The Char G1P had received its designation letter P because Poniatowsky had designed it. SEAM (Société d'Études et d'Applications Mécaniques) was the only company whose project was sufficiently advanced — due to being informed of the first specifications of 1935 — to present an actual prototype to the Commission de Vincennes, early in the night of 3 December 1936, be it in an unfinished state.[6] Despite having neither the intended engine nor any armament fixed (a bell-shaped dummy turret with large glass windows was placed on the turret ring), the vehicle already weighed 23 metric tonnes, confirming the prediction of a study made by the army workshop, the Atelier de Rueil, that it would be impossible for a tank to meet the required specifications within even a 28 ton limit. Instead of the intended 12 CV 280 hp engine a Hispano 6 CV engine of 120 hp had been fixed. Although a petro-electric transmission system was used, theoretically leading to a higher effective power output, tests performed between 3 and 10 December showed that the maximum speed was, as could be expected from the weak provisional engine, a disappointing fourteen km/h on the road, ten km/h in terrain. The transmission alone weighed 2,4 tons, 1,5 tons heavier than a traditional mechanical system. Steering was easy though and unlike most other petro-electrical systems it performed without reliability problems. The vehicle made extensive use of smoothly curved cast sloped armour. There was room in the right side of the hull for a 75 mm main gun. There was to be a crew of four: a commander (also manning a machine gun turret), a driver, a gunner and a radio-operator. The length was 557 cm.[17]

The commission decided that, given the unfinished state of the project, no definitive decisions could be made. SEAM is invited to improve the prototype by lengthening the hull, fitting a more supple suspension and moving the fire-proof bulkhead 95 mm to the back to enlarge the fighting compartment, creating more room to operate the 75 mm gun.[18]

On 6 June 1937 the project was considered by the Conseil Supérieur de la Guerre as a possible battle tank to equip the future Divisions Cuirassées, the armoured divisions of the Infantry.[19] During 1937 and 1938 the company rebuilt the vehicle, changing the suspension and cooperating with ARL to install a 280 hp Hispano-Suiza engine. Pictures show it had six large road wheels per side. Besides the hull armament, the placement of an APX4 turret, armed with a 47 mm SA35 gun, was ordered by the commission on 24 May 1938, together with the placement of a radio set.[13] The dimensions of the prototype were also slightly changed: the width diminished from 2.94 m to 2.92 m and the height from 2,76 to 2.73. The larger turret was partly compensated by bringing hull height from 183 to 174 cm.

Early 1939 it was still considered to order about 250 vehicles. During this time SEAM experienced severe financial difficulties, however. When in July 1938 new specifications called for a main 75 mm armament in the turret, the company was unable to finance a completely redesigned vehicle; the existing prototype could not easily be adapted and its transmission had already shown to be overloaded by earlier weight increases. The company appealed to the ARL workshop to assist; the Conseil Consultatif de l'Armement ordered on 19 January that ARL should comply; it received the prototype to install an ARL 3 turret on a widened superstructure. When war broke out, on 10 September 1939 this development was suspended. On 22 December 1939 it was restarted but merely as a technology demonstrator; at the time of the Fall of France the vehicle was still unfinished and without turret, though it was the only offshoot of the Char G1 project to near completion or even to be in a running condition.[20]

Char G1F

Late 1937 Fouga had not yet submitted a definite proposal. Its initial project, no drawings of which have survived, proposed a system in which the hull gun was traversed by slewing the entire vehicle, just as with the Char B1, but instead of the expensive Naeder transmission a British Wilson gear box is foreseen. Another difference is that the track run is low. The commission rejected the use of a Carden-Loyd track.[21] Nevertheless the order for the production of a prototype was obtained. In 1938 it was estimated that the weight would rise to 35 tonnes if a 75 mm turret was added.[14] During 1939 the development was terminated, perhaps somewhat earlier than the other projects.[22]

Char G1B

Baudet-Donon-Roussel proposed to build a tank with the general outlines of the Char B1, including a high track run, but with seven road wheels per side, that did not require a daily greasing, using sealed ball-bearings.[23] The track had a continuous rubber (Pendelastic) inner lining.[7] The project had the following dimensions: a length of 556 cm; a width of 280 cm and a height of 285 cm. It thus was the largest and heaviest of all proposals with a weight of 28,5 tonnes. Track width would be 35 cm, the normal wading capacity 145 cm; BDR thought it also possible to make the tank fully immersible to cross rivers while being guided from the river bank.[24] It was planned to install an air-cooled Potez 12V 320 hp engine, placed transversely in the hull. The transmission was petro-electrical and of the Gebus-Roussin type. The fuel tank would have a capacity of 520 litres. The armament would consist of 75 mm SA35 howitzer in the hull with 70 rounds. In the 1937 configuration it would make use of APX4 turret with a 47 mm SA35 gun; 102 47 mm rounds would be stored.[25] As the hull was wide enough to place the 75 mm gun in its middle, the turret should have been moved to the left, but this was forgotten in the proposal, as the commission pointed out.[7]

When the changed specifications asked for a 75 mm gun in a turret, the project threatened to become much too heavy as the hull was already so large; the commission in the summer of 1938 urged to remedy this somehow, but the problem proved to be insurmountable. A proposal to install a more powerful 350 hp Renault engine, only partly compensated for a drop in mobility. It transpired on 13 April 1939 that the intended ARL3 turret, bringing its height to 325 cm, could not be fitted without making the design too wide for rail transport and that the weight, now projected at 37.5 metric tonnes, exceeded pontoon limits.[20] The project was suspended on 10 September 1939, even though a prototype had been ordered in March 1939 by the ministry of defence. A wooden mock-up was all that was finished — and even that could not be shown to the commission because it was for security reasons constructed in an enclosed room lacking a sufficiently large exit;[12] no complete prototype was ever built. However, from the Char G1 B project the ARL 40 tank destroyer project would be developed.[26]

Char G1L

The project of Lorraine de Dietrich was based on its 1933 design for a light infantry tank. It was low and long with an excellent trench crossing capacity. This however implied there was no room for a 75 mm hull-based gun; its calibre was reduced to 47 mm, which seemed redundant given that it also had a 47 mm gun in a APX4 turret. The track was that of Carden-Loyd and considered too weak by the commission; likewise the initial proposal to fit a Cleveland transmission was seen as a draw-back; it was replaced by a Cotal.[18] The engine planned was a Hispano-Suiza of 230 hp.[26] The length was 550 cm, the width 250 cm.[17]

The project differed from most of the others in using several welded steel plate sections in addition to cast armour.[25] In 1937 it became clear that the quality of cast armour was difficult to control and that limited production facilities, combined with the fact that many other French tanks used cast armour sections also, would restrict production. Also the Lorraine tank's electromechanical transmission was less of a development hazard; its suspension was that of the Lorraine 37L tractor and thus already in mass production. At the same time international tensions continued to rise; to have a modern type ready for introduction seemed a matter of simple precaution. As a result late 1937 the project was accepted for service and Lorraine was granted a full development contract for 2.6 million franc, a prototype to be delivered before the end of 1938.[9]

In the summer of 1938 a metal mock-up was ready; the company predicted production could start in 1941. This development path was discontinued in 1939 however, as a result of the changed specifications. The design of the Char G1L was changed to fit a 75 mm gun turret, its projected weight increasing to 36 metric tons. Even the first proposal had an estimated empty hull weight of 16 tons. To compensate for the higher weight, a more powerful Panhard engine of 450 hp was planned; to accommodate it the engine deck had to be raised so high that it would impede a full rotation of the heavier FCM turret. With the new turret the height was 290 cm. Also the suspension elements threatened to be overloaded; the track ground-pressure was, at six kilogramme per square centimetre, three times the indicated maximum.[26] Early 1939 Lorraine still tried to keep the project viable by creating a turret derived from the ARL 3 type, as not a single ARL 3 turret had yet be constructed even as a mock-up. This Lorraine turret was somewhat lower, leading to a limited depression of the gun.[20] On 13 April 1939 the commission advised to abandon the project, but this was refused by the ministry of defence. On 10 September, after the outbreak of war, it was finally suspended.[22]

Char G1R

Louis Renault was very interested in the programme as it on the one hand threatened to compete with his own Char D2 — and the Char B1 in the production of which he had a large stake — and on the other hand offered an opportunity to repair his reputation as France's most prominent tank producer that had been damaged by the failing AMC 34 and AMC 35 projects and complaints about the reliability of his other types.[27]

Renault made a proposal to the commission on 10 December 1936, at a time the military branch of the company had just been nationalised and renamed the AMX factory. This did not stop Louis Renault from remaining very active on the field of military design and production though, using the remainder of his company and competing or cooperating with AMX as he saw fit. Quickly a wooden mock-up was finished of the Renault version of the Char G; the project had the factory designation Renault ACK1. The designation merely indicates the chronological order of Renault's military prototypes and has no further meaning.

Renault's first project was based on the Renault ZM, or Renault R35. It had a similar smooth curved cast hull to that of the light infantry tank but was much wider and had six road wheels and double tracks per side — to avoid having to design a new broad track. It had a modern torsion bar suspension and a (rather outdated) Cleveland differential.[28] The suspension protection plates formed an integral part with the hull's main armour.[29]

The hull was crowned by a flat-domed cast superstructure, that superficially resembled a circular conventional turret. In reality however it was at first planned to be fixed; the 47 mm gun was supposed to traverse through a horizontal slit like in a pill-box, rotating on a pivot fixed to the hull floor, a proposal made by Colonel Balland. In a second version of this design by engineer Jean Restany, the "pseudo-turret" was traversable, but simply carried along by the electrically driven gun-mount; the turret therefore would not have to be equipped with a heavy gun-mantlet and, not bearing the weight of the armament, could be much lighter. On the right side of the superstructure a vertical cylinder protruded, on top of which a small rotating commando cupola was fitted, that was armed with dual co-axial machine guns. The superstructure, with the commander/gunner on the right and the loader on the left, had sufficient room to hold a Schneider 47 mm antitank gun, that was much more powerful than the shorter 47 mm SA 35 gun equipping the standard APX1 and APX4 turrets. Expecting that this superior firepower would give his design a clear advantage leading to a quick production contract, as had so often happened in the past, Renault was unpleasantly surprised when lobbying by Poniatowski contributed to a change in specifications to the effect that a 75 mm gun had to be carried in the hull. The ACK1 hull was simply too flat for this. To save his project Renault started a strong counter-lobby. Part of this was proposing, already on 10 December 1936, that as an alternative option the turret should hold a longer (L/29) main 75 mm armament.[30] It was also claimed that the weight of the projects, 24 tons, could be reduced to 19.6 tons by limiting the armament to a single gun.

The commission in 1937 was hesitant about the torsion-bar suspension, and rejected the Cleveland transmission and double-track feature. It also concluded that weight would be at least 25 tonnes. Nevertheless an order for a prototype was made, in view of the innovative armament mounting.[29]

The specification change of 1 February 1938 was much in favour of Renault, as the other companies needed a very fundamental redesign of their projects to meet the new demands, whereas the ACK1 with its broad fighting compartment could easily accommodate a wide turret as it was. Renault also promised that his tank could be taken into production in 1940, a year earlier than the Char G1L, so the latter project could be replaced by his Char G1R as the main development type.

At this moment however it transpired that the weight estimate earlier made by the bribed Infantry officer had been a deliberate falsehood and that the best that could be expected was 28 tonnes. Also the claimed first production date, that had already led to a limiting of Char B1 bis orders, later was proven to be wildly optimistic. In April 1938 Renault claimed that weight could yet be saved by perpetuating the feature of the torsion-bar suspension, limiting the crew to four and keeping the ammunition load to its bare minimum. The commission decided however to bring the weight limit of the project to thirty tonnes, as this was in line with the other projects and the planned inner hull side armour (located below fifty millimetres external suspension protection plates) of ten millimetres was deemed too thin. The weight advantage in relation to the rival designs thus largely disappeared.[26]

In the summer of 1938 a further problem for the Renault design materialised in that the new demand was made that the turret should hold a stabilised gun and a telemetric rangefinder, features to which the cast turret could not be easily adapted.[31] As the 2.5 tonne pseudo-turret was moved about by the gun barrel, its momentum tended to disturb the sight-laying. This problem was solved in 1939 with the help of APX, that designed a system in which the vertical axis of the gun mount was directly connected to the turret roof. At the same time the troublesome Cleveland transmission was abandoned.[32] Overall the Renault design process in the years 1938 and 1939 was very slow.

On 10 September 1939 the Char G1R was the only one of the projects that was to be further developed, probably because the Renault company was exceptional in having reserve production capacity left.[22]

Turret design

In France during the thirties, generally tank turrets were designed separately from tank hulls, to serve as standard types applicable to many different vehicles. On 1 June 1938 the commission determined that three teams, those of ARL, FCM and Renault, were in the process of developing new turrets capable of being fitted on the Char G1 under the new specifications.[33] These were invited to make the necessary changes and research existing or new high velocity 75 mm guns.[31]

In July 1939 ARL was producing a prototype of both a turret, the 5.7 tonne ARL 3 fitted with a turret-basket and having a turret ring diameter of 188 cm, and a gun, also in the context of the FCM F1 project. FCM was likewise considering to use a changed 7.5 tonne version of the welded octagonal auxiliary turret of the heavy FCM F1, equipped with an advanced semi-automatic loader and having a ring diameter of 185 cm.[14] As a low-risk project FCM considered the use of the also welded and octagonal F4 turret that had been developed from that of the Char 2C and was equipped with the standard 75 mm field gun.[31]

Tactical function

In 1939 the goal of the Char G1 project was no longer to provide tanks to be employed in organic infantry division battalions — for this rôle now the AMX 38 was planned, the Char d'accompagnement, that with its twenty tonne weight and 47 mm armament was indeed very close to the earlier "twenty tonne tank" concept — nor to replace the Char B1, as the threat of imminent war had dictated that most production capacity was to be used to increase the manufacture of existing types. In fact no official policy regarding the tactical function of some future Char G1 had been formulated. From a strategic point of view the only possible employment was during the third phase of the planned offensive campaign to defeat Germany: after the enemy would have been contained in 1940 with the help of the existing tank types and the Westwall would in 1941 have been either outflanked, or broken by the superheavy FCM F1, in 1942 or 1943 deep strategic exploitation by the new technologically superior Char G1 should have brought final victory.[34]

Char Futur

When in September 1939 war broke out, all tank design policies were affected. On 15 December the Inspectorate of Tanks decided that war production should be limited to existing types with the exception of three precisely circumscribed classes: the Char d'Accompagnement, a new medium infantry tank; the Char de Bataille, a new heavy tank and the Char de Fortification, a superheavy tank. A new Commission of Tank Study was created to study these three types; it first met on 28 February 1940. The commission decided that the Char d'Accompagnement would need a 47 mm gun in a turret and the Char de Bataille at least a 90 mm gun in the hull.[35] The Char G1, being in between the two classes, would thus not be produced.

Of course Louis Renault did his best to overturn this decision. On 1 April 1940 a subcommission received Renault's head engineer Serre, who argued it would be folly to discontinue the Char G1 project as it was so near fruition. The first armour set would be manufactured by Schneider in July 1940, the suspension and gearbox were almost finished, a new 350 hp engine was being tested (he didn't mention this had met much resistance from Louis Renault, who thought the existing engine used in the Char B1 was sufficient, if uprated). The weight would be lower than 35 tons, perhaps as low as 32 ton. All theoretical studies could be completed in May and the first vehicle in September. The Commission, not as easily swayed as the previous one after the manipulation by Renault had become known, answered that the prototype could of course be finished as ordered, but that production of the type, despite its interesting advanced technological features, was excluded.[33] The armistice of June 1940 ended all development.

However, in 2008 French armour historian Stéphane Ferrard proposed an alternative interpretation, arguing that the fact that the Renault project was singled out for continued development shows that, had the course of events not prevented it, very likely the Char G1R would have been taken into production anyway, probably with the ARL 3 turret and a 400 hp engine.[36] Further logical improvement steps would then have been the fitting of the three-man ARL 42 turret, followed by the change to a Long 40 75 mm gun, resulting for 1942 in a tank type that would have been the equal in armament and mobility to actually built medium tanks of that date, such as the Soviet T-34 and American M4 Sherman, but with more technologically advanced features, like a range finder and gun stabilisation, foreboding the postwar AMX 30.[37]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Pierre Touzin, 1979, p. 165
  2. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 38
  3. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 39
  4. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 40
  5. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 44
  6. ^ a b c Pierre Touzin, 1979, p. 166
  7. ^ a b c Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 67
  8. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 43
  9. ^ a b c Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 48
  10. ^ Jean-Gabriel Jeudy, 1997, p. 55
  11. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 71
  12. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 49
  13. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 50
  14. ^ a b c d Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 53
  15. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 54
  16. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 55
  17. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 73
  18. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 46
  19. ^ Jean-Gabriel Jeudy, 1997, p. 56
  20. ^ a b c Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 74
  21. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 70
  22. ^ a b c Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 78
  23. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007a, p. 42
  24. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 66
  25. ^ a b Pierre Touzin, 1979, p. 167
  26. ^ a b c d Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 51
  27. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 62
  28. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 64
  29. ^ a b Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 65
  30. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2007b, p. 63
  31. ^ a b c Stéphane Ferrard, 2008a, p. 52
  32. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 76
  33. ^ a b Pierre Touzin, 1979, p. 168
  34. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 72
  35. ^ Pierre Touzin, 1979, p. 186-190
  36. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 79
  37. ^ Stéphane Ferrard, 2008b, p. 77

References

  • Pierre Touzin, Les véhicules blindés français, 1900-1944. EPA, 1979
  • Jean-Gabriel Jeudy, Chars de France, E.T.A.I., 1997
  • Stéphane Ferrard, 2007, "Le Futur Char G1, 1re partie 1935-1938: Le Char de 20 Tonnes", Histoire de Guerre, Blindés & Matériel, N° 78, pp. 38–47
  • Stéphane Ferrard, 2007, "Le Futur Char G1, 1re partie 1935-1938 (2): La <<Bombe>> Renault et les autres 20 T", Histoire de Guerre, Blindés & Matériel, N° 79, pp. 62–71
  • Stéphane Ferrard, 2008, "Le Futur Char G1, 2e partie 1938-1940 (1): 35 tonnes maximum pour un 75 en tourelle", Histoire de Guerre, Blindés & Matériel, N° 81, pp. 48–55
  • Stéphane Ferrard, 2008, "Le Futur Char G1, 2e partie 1938-1940 (2): Vers le Char de 35 tonnes de Série", Histoire de Guerre, Blindés & Matériel, N° 83, pp. 72–80

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