Renault EG

Summary

The Renault EG is an all-wheel drive truck/artillery tractor produced between 1914 and 1919 by the French manufacturer Renault.

Renault EG
Early-design Renault EG
Overview
ManufacturerRenault
Production1914–1919
AssemblyBoulogne-Billancourt, France
Body and chassis
LayoutFront-engine, four-wheel drive

History edit

The Renault EG was tested at the 1914 tests for all-terrain vehicles organised by the French military.[1] In 1914, Renault developed a lighter version, the FB, but it was abandoned for concentrating on the EG.[2] During World War I, it was commissioned by the French military. Mass production started in 1915[3][4] and about 978 were built by the end of the war.[4] According to François Vauvillier, a total of 1,132 EGs were delivered to the French army.[3] EGs, along with the Berliet CBA, the Latil TAR, the Renaults EP and FU, and the Saurer Type B, were key vehicles of the Voie Sacrée (Holy Road) for supplying the French army during the Battle of Verdun.[5] In March 1924, the French military commissioned more powerful successors of both the Renault EG and the Latil TAR. At tests conducted in 1926, the Renault candidate was not conclusively better than the EG, so the plan to replace it was abandoned. Renault did not produce heavy artillery tractors after that. About 635 EGs were still in service by October 1939, although most of them were destroyed during 1940.[3]

Technical details edit

 
Renault EG used as an artillery tractor by American Expeditionary Forces in France in 1918.

The EG engine is an 8.49-litre inline-four unit producing between 35 metric horsepower (26 kW) at 1,000 rpm and 45 metric horsepower (33 kW) at 1,400 rpm.[6] As other Renaults of that time, the radiator is located behind the engine.[4] In the late 1920s, some EGs were fitted with a more powerful 7.8-litre inline-four engine delivering 57 metric horsepower (42 kW).[3] The EG has a four-wheel steering system by which front and rear wheels are moved independently through two steering gears linked by universal joints to the steering wheel, improving the turning radius. The gearbox is a 4-speed operated through a gear lever. The double wheels are made of cast steel and are of the same diameter (1,000 millimetres (39 in)) both on front and rear.[6] The truck payload is 2,000 kilograms (4,400 lb) and it can haul about 15 tonnes. The wheelbase is 3,600 millimetres (140 in) and the width 1,500 millimetres (59 in).[4]

References edit

Citations edit

Bibliography edit

  • "Le concours militaire de Tracteurs à adhérence totale" [The military competition for total-adherence tractors]. L'Aviation et l'Automobilisme Militaires (in French) (4). Paris. 1914. ISSN 2428-2278.
  • Boniface, Jean-Michel; Jeudy, Jean-Gabriel (1996). Les camions de la victoire: le service automobile pendant la Grande guerre , 1914–1918 [Victory trucks: automotive service during the Great War, 1914–1918] (in French). Editions Ch. Massin. ISBN 2-7072-0300-9.
  • "Les enjeux de la Voie Sacrée" [The challenges of the Holy Road] (in French). French Ministry of Defense. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
  • Vauvillier, François (2018). Tous les Renault militaires (1914–1940) : Volume 1, les camions [All military Renaults (1914–1940): Volume 1, the trucks] (in French). Histoire et Collections. ISBN 978-2-35250-498-6.