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Char léger Modèle 1935 R ("R 35") | |
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Type | Light infantry tank |
Place of origin | France |
Service history | |
Used by | France Romania |
Wars | Second World War 1948 Arab–Israeli War 1958 Lebanon Crisis |
Production history | |
Designed | 1934 |
Manufacturer | Renault |
Produced | 1936–1940 |
No. built | R 35: 1,540 "R 40": 145 approx. |
Specifications | |
Mass | 10.6 metric tons |
Length | 4.02 m (13 ft 2 in) |
Width | 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) |
Height | 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in) |
Crew | 2 [1] |
Armour | 43 mm |
Main armament | 37 mm L/21 SA 18 gun |
Secondary armament | 7.5 mm MAC31 Reibel machine gun coaxial |
Engine | Renault V-4 gasoline engine 82 hp [1] |
Power/weight | 8.0 hp/tonne |
Suspension | Horizontal rubber cylinder springs |
Operational range | 130 km |
Maximum speed | 20 km/h (12 mph) |
The Renault R35, an abbreviation of Char léger Modèle 1935 R or R 35, was a French light infantry tank of the Second World War.
Designed from 1933 onwards and produced from 1936, the type was intended as an infantry support light tank, equipping autonomous tank battalions, that would be allocated to individual infantry divisions to assist them in executing offensive operations. To this end it was relatively well-armoured but slow and lacking a good antitank capacity, fitted with a short 37 mm gun. At the outbreak of the war, the antitank role was more emphasized leading to the development and eventual production from April 1940 of a subtype with a more powerful longer gun, the Renault R40. It was planned to shift new production capacity to the manufacture of other, faster, types, but due to the defeat of France, the R35/40 remained the most numerous French tank of the war, with about 1685 vehicles having been produced by June 1940. At that moment it had also been exported to Poland, Romania, Turkey and Yugoslavia. For the remainder of the war, Germany and its allies would use captured vehicles, some of them rebuilt into tank destroyers.