Zestaw modeli do składania ARL Tracteur C w skali 1/72
French heavy paper tank | SLA (resin) printed
Cena regularna
825,00 Kč
Cena regularna
Cena promocyjna
825,00 Kč
Cena jednostkowa
na
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
The FCM F4 Variant D was a French heavy tank project developed in the late 1930s by Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée (FCM) as part of France’s effort to create a “char de rupture,” or breakthrough tank, capable of smashing through fortified enemy lines. Conceived in response to a 1936 army requirement for a heavily armored and powerfully armed vehicle, the F4 series was intended to combine a 75 mm main gun with a secondary 47 mm weapon and several machine guns. Variant D, proposed around August 1937, differed from earlier iterations by moving the 47 mm gun from a fixed hull position to a small rear turret, improving firing flexibility and giving the tank a more balanced, turret-based design. The vehicle was expected to weigh over 55 tonnes, with a crew of four and dual engines to achieve a modest top speed of about 30 km/h. Although it remained on paper, the FCM F4 represented a crucial stage in France’s exploration of heavy tank concepts, bridging the gap between interwar medium tanks and the later, massive FCM F1 super-heavy design. The project was ultimately abandoned as military priorities shifted and the French Army sought even larger, more heavily armored vehicles. Nonetheless, Variant D reflects the ambitious engineering thinking of pre-war France and the nation’s early attempts to balance firepower, protection, and mobility in a single breakthrough tank.
