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Cold War French Prototypes

Lorraine 40t

France (1952)
Medium Tank – 1 Prototype Built

The 50 tonne tank project

During the late 1940s and early 1950s, France was developing a new tank to replace the now obsolete captured German Panther and the short lived ARL 44 heavy tank in French military service.

This project, designated M4, aimed at producing a vehicle weighing 50 tonnes which would allow France to compete with other tank producing nations on the battlefield and in export. The main goal was the revival of the French tank industry that had been one of the best in the world prior to WW2.
The M4 project was eventually handed over to the AMX company (Atelier de Construction d’Issy-les-Moulineaux) which created the AMX 50 tanks. However, as the tank development continued on its course through the 1950s, the tank weight grew from the initial specified 50 tons to more than 60 tons, due to the attempts to upgun and uparmor the vehicle. This was necessary to cope with new Soviet tank designs. This led the authorities to the search for an another firm able to provide an alternative 50-tonne design.
The 100mm armed AMX 50 designThe 1945 plans for the AMX M4

The Lorraine Company

In the early 1900’s the French engineering and manufacturing companies Lorraine and De Dietrich merged to form Lorraine-Dietrich. They designed and produced some of the first automobiles. By the first decade, the company’s factory in Luneville, Lorraine was renowned in the automobile industry having produced great vehicles and hired engineers such as the famed Ettore Bugatti in their workshop.
The Lorraine-Dietrich plant in the 1920s
After WW1, the company continued production of automobiles and aircraft engines, but in 1928 De Dietrich sold their share of the company and from then on, the company was renamed Lorraine. Production of automobiles ceased by 1934 and Lorraine began focusing on military work. One such military product was the Lorraine 37L armored supply tractor used by France and later Germany during WW2.
The Lorraine 37L military tractor
With yet another war over, Lorraine, like so many private companies in France, was financially crippled. It tried to rebuild its military and rail locomotive business. Lorraine was eventually bought by an American company, producing trucks before entering obscurity after the 1950s.

The Canon D’Assaut Lorraine

During the development of the M4 tank in the late 1940s, the Lorraine company was developing and testing a self-propelled gun (SPG) that had a visual similarity to the WW2 Jagdpanzer IV. It was called the Canon D’Assaut Lorraine. Weighing in at 25 tonnes, this SPG was equipped with a version of the 100 mm SA47 and could reach a top speed of 60 km/h (37 mph). It had a novel Veil Picard pneumatic air core tire/ road wheel as opposed to a steel road wheel, lowering the weight of the tank. The road wheels were mounted on torsion bar suspension with hydraulic shock absorbers. Many of its components would be used in future Lorraine tank development such as the Lorraine 40t and the various Lorraine experimental self-propelled artillery guns until 1953, when the project was abandoned.
The Canon D’Assaut LorraineThe Canon D’Assaut Lorraine

Lorraine 40t specifications

Dimensions 10.8  x 3.30 x 2.85 m
35ft 5in x 10ft 10in x 9ft 4in
Total weight, battle ready 39.7 tonnes
Crew 4 (driver, commander, gunner, loader/radio)
Propulsion Maybach HL 295, 850 hp
Suspension Torsion bar suspension with Veil Picard tires
Speed (road) 60 km/h (37 mph)
Armament 100 mm SA47 gun
7.5 mm coaxial machine-gun
7.5mm AA machine-gun
Armor Hull front: 40 mm @ 58°
Hull side: 30 mm @ 30°
Turret: 45 mm @ 55°

Links

The Lorraine 40t on Chars Francais
The Cannon D’Assaut Lorraine on Chars Francais
The WoT Wiki page on the Lorraine 40t
The AMX-50 on Wikipedia
About the Lorraine 40t’s depression on FTR
The Lorraine factory

The development of Lorraine 40t

The Lorraine company kept a close eye on the designs made by AMX, and were tasked with producing a lightweight variant of the AMX 50. Their design mated a hydraulically operated oscillating turret to the then experimental Canon D’Assaut Lorraine’s chassis, thus creating the Lorraine 40t. Similar to the turret designed by FAMH (Compagnie des forges et aciéries de la marine et d’Homécourt) for the AMX-50, the turret for the Lorraine 40t was designed in 2 sections. The lower section allowed the turret to rotate horizontally and the upper section could depress and elevate along with the gun with respect to the lower portion, with an elevation range of -8 degrees to +15 degrees.
Front view of the Lorraine 40t, showing the pike nose and oscillating turret
Front view of the Lorraine 40t, showing the pike nose and oscillating turret
Like on the AMX 50 project, the 100mm SA47 (The same version of the gun that the Canon D’Assaut Lorraine mounted) was chosen to be mounted in the turret, allowing the Lorraine 40t to achieve a similar amount of firepower as its heavier counterpart. Another notable feature the Lorraine 40t had in common with the AMX 50 was the introduction of a drum autoloader to the main armament with 50 rounds stored in ammo rack within the hull. The fact that the gun was mounted in an oscillating turret meant that engineers were able to easily install an autoloader mechanism without worrying about the possibility of the limited vertical movement of the gun within the turret. The commander and the gunner shared a linked firing system, allowing both crew members the ability to operate the gun.
Like many French tanks developed or prototyped during the post war period, the Lorraine 40t’s engine was of German design, inspired from the many German Tiger and Panther tanks that littered the French countryside, a few of which entered French military service after the WW2. In the case of the Lorraine 40t, a French built turbocharged water cooled Maybach HL 230 V12 called the HL 295 was used, producing 850hp at 3000 RPM. This engine was also used to power the AMX-50. Using an engine which was designed to propel much heavier tanks such as the Tiger and AMX-50, allowed the Lorraine 40t to reach speeds of up to 60 km/h (37 mph) during testing with relative ease. This was roughly 10 km/h faster than the AMX50.
In order to meet the requirements of weighing less than the then overweight AMX-50, the tank had drastically thinner armor. It was of welded construction, with thicknesses of 25 to 40mm. The tank was equipped with 10 Veil Picard tires (5 on each side) instead of steel road wheels to save weight. The inclusion of these tires also increases crew comfort by reducing vibrations and shocks when the vehicle was in motion. These attributes were carried over from the Canon D’Assaut Lorraine.
The Lorraine 40t undergoing some maintenance
The Lorraine 40t undergoing some maintenance
Another notable feature of the Lorraine 40t was the pike nose design of the tank. It was similar to the second hull design of the AMX 50, which was inspired by several Soviet tank designs of its time like the IS-3, which had appeared publicly during the 1945 victory parade in Berlin. This was done in order to maximize the protection of the vehicle within the weight constraints. However, the effect of this design choice was probably limited, given that the vehicle had only 40 mm of frontal armor.
Two prototypes were finished in 1952 and testing of the vehicles went on through 1953 and 1954 but never reached the production stage.

The end of the line

Because America, as part of NATO, supplied surplus M47 Pattons to the French during the outbreak of the Korean war, interest in the AMX-50 and Lorraine 40t wavered. The high cost of producing and maintaining these vehicles eventually caused the cancellation of the tanks related to the M4 project in favor of the vehicles provided by NATO. Further development of a French main battle tank would not surface again until the Franco-German collaboration which sprouted the Leopard and AMX 30 in the late 1950s. The Lorraine 40t and its variants were supposedly the final attempts of Lorraine to reenter the military market.
An article by Velocity
A French M47 Patton at the Saumur tank museum
A French M47 Patton at the Saumur tank museum

Gallery



The Lorraine 40t medium tank – illustration by Jaroslaw Janas

18 replies on “Lorraine 40t”

I expect you to reply to questions that I have… My comments arent mostly just to say something

Thanks for this article and the illustration. Just discovered this “canon d’assaut Lorraine” SPG, interesting prototype, have the tanks been scrapped after the end of the project?

Most of the military works of Lorraine went MIA after the project folded. Blame it on financial difficulties but a high chance the vehicle and its varients was scrapped.

The French had so abandoned or disabled Panthers in France after the war they were able to create two brigades entirely composed of Panthers. However they were mostly there for evaluating performances. This was a mix of about 50 A and G types in the 503° RCC (Régiment de Chars de Combat) and into the 6°Cuirs (Régiment de Cuirassiers). It was short-lived because of MDAP US tanks were provided and the lack of spare parts. But their influence over French postwar designs are undeniable. Also according to accounts of St Nazaire’s 1st G.M.R. 15 tanks had been repaired and were used, such as the one Tiger I, one Tiger II, one Panther an 11 Panzer IV, one halftrack Panzerwerfer 42 plus other vehicles. Again, until parts failed. I’m confident someone in the team will make an article about this one day.

is the tank still around or has it been scrapped? or is there not any information about what happened to the tank?

Wargaming has shown photos of a new tank called the Lorraine 50 ton
I believe it’s an up-armoured Lorraine 40t with the TCB turret with a 120mm cannon. Wargaming states the vehicle was a concept/existed in blueprints. Do you suppose it is real or another fake?

The lorraine 40t was a cool design but its hull seems tall.
maybe with a shorter hull a little bit weaker engine and it would do very well.I too play blitz

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