Renault Novaquatre Explained

Renault Novaquatre
Assembly:Île Seguin, Boulogne-Billancourt, Paris
Manufacturer:Renault
Production:1937–1941
Predecessor:Renault Celtaquatre
Class:Mid-size car
Layout:FR layout
Body Style:4-door Sedan
Engine:2383 cc I4, 48hp
1937–1939
I4 1813 cc, 38hp
1939–1940
Transmission:3-speed manual
Wheelbase:earlier cars: 27101NaN1
later cars: 28301NaN1
Weight:1080kg (2,380lb)/1140kg (2,510lb)

The Novaquatre is a car first presented in the autumn of 1937 by Renault and produced until 1940. It was presented in 1937 as an economy version of the Primaquatre,[1] combining the body of the little Renault Celtaquatre, with the 2383 cc 4-cylinder water-cooled engine of the larger Renault Primaquatre.

Supporting its credentials as an economy model, the engine in the Novaquatre came with a listed maximum output of 48hp at 3,000 rpm as opposed the 52hp at 3,300 rpm for the Primaquatre with what was, on paper, much the same engine. The Primaquatre also came with a much reduced thirst for fuel, with consumption quoted at 9/10 litres per 100 km as against 12/13 litres for the more powerful car.

A top speed of 110 km/h (69 mph) was claimed for the car in its original form, although this reduced to 100 km/h (63 mph) at the end of 1939 when a smaller engine replaced the original unit. Power was transmitted to the rear wheels via a conventional three-speed manual transmission.

The Celtaquatre had ceased production in April 1938 and was effectively replaced by both the (slightly smaller) Renault Juvaquatre and by the Novaquatre.[2] With the disappearance of the Celtaquatre the 27101NaN1 wheelbase also disappeared from the range, and the Novaquatre was slightly lengthened. The standard four-door saloon-bodied Novaquatre now sat on a wheelbase of 28301NaN1,[3] which had already been used for the "Commerciale" version of the Celtaquatre.

In September 1939, France, like Britain, declared war in Germany and in June 1940 the German Army invaded and rapidly occupied northern France. These seismic military events give context to the changes that the model underwent, and explain the shortness of its production run. Late in 1939, the engine was replaced with a smaller, 1813 cc unit, and the car’s cable brakes were replaced by Lockheed hydraulic brakes. The new Novaquatre BFH1 would presumably have been presented formally in October at the 1939 Motor Show had the event not been cancelled.[3]

Relatively few Novaquatres were produced. Taking the April 1940 factory output of 716 cars, 441 were Juvaquatres, 240 were Primaquatres and just 35 were Novaquatres. A couple of months later, probably before the German invasion, Novaquatre production came to an end.[3]

Types

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Odin, L.C. World in Motion 1939 - The whole of the year's automobile production. Belvedere Publishing, 2015. ASIN: B00ZLN91ZG.
  2. Book: Automobilia . Toutes les Voitures Françaises 1938 (Salon 1937). 6. Pages 72 & 75. 1998. Histoire & collections. Paris .
  3. Book: Automobilia . Toutes les Voitures Françaises 1940 - 46 (Les années sans salon). 26. 60. 2003. Histoire & collections. Paris .