Renault 4

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Renault
Renault 4 (1961-1967)
Renault 4 (1961-1967)
4th
Production period: 1961-1992
Class : Small car
Body versions : Hatchback , leisure activity vehicle , vans , pick-up , beach wagon
Engines:
Petrol engines : 0.85–1.1 liters,
26–34 hp (19–25 kW)
Length: 3663 mm
Broad: 1430 mm
Height: 1470 mm
Wheelbase : 2400-2450 mm
Empty weight : 600-720 kg
Previous model Renault 4CV
successor Renault 5 / Renault Rapid

The Renault 4 ("R4" for short, in France "Quatrelle" [katʁɛl]) is a small car from Renault ( Régie Nationale des Usines Renault ), which was produced from the summer of 1961 to the end of 1992. It was the first mass -produced vehicle in compact design with a one-piece tailgate hinged at the top (fifth door) and the first Renault car with front-wheel drive . The car, which is very successful on the market, was sold over eight million times during the 31-year production period.

story

On August 28, 1961, Renault presented its in-house project R1120 to the French press as an inexpensive passenger car , which was officially renamed Renault 4 only in 1965. The very simple, but functional construction with flat glazing, sheet metal shaping without large draw depths , level car floor and very simple equipment enabled not only cost-effective production, but also a low vehicle mass.

At the IAA in Frankfurt on September 21, 1961 he was a "fair star". At the beginning of October 1961, 200 white R4s were presented at the Palais de Chaillot in the run-up to the Paris Motor Show, at the time a remarkable marketing measure for Renault .

The R4 was modified for the first time in August 1967. The external changes included a new anodized aluminum radiator grille with a central strut, the wider frame of which included the headlights, so it was immediately recognizable. The Renault rhombus was attached to the left in the strut. The benches received upholstery. The most important innovation was the four-speed transmission instead of the three-speed transmission. Shifting was continued with a " stick shift " because the gearbox was installed in front of the engine. In autumn 1974, the R4 models were given a black plastic grill , similar to the larger Renault 16 . The Renault logo , the rhombus , was now back in the center of the radiator grille.

From mid-1976 to the end of 1978, a special model called Safari, initially available in two colors, was offered with rubber strips on the sides and special seats with integrated headrests. From 1977 angular parking lights and flashing lights were installed in the front. The exhaust pipe was relocated to the rear, previously the exit was on the driver's side in front of the rear wheel . The main silencer was in the left, front fender.

Renault 4 GTL at the 4L Trophy 2011

With the introduction of the Renault 4 GTL (1108 cm³ with 34 hp), the series received a gray plastic grill and standard side protective strips made of reinforced plastic at the beginning of 1978. The bumpers were painted instead of chrome-plated and the moldings were omitted. The front drum brakes were later replaced by the disc brakes of the R6.

mission

Pope Francis' Renault 4 1984.

The Spanish Guardia Civil and the French Gendarmerie used the R4 as service vehicles until well into the 1990s. The R4 was criticized for its inadequate corrosion protection - the hollow profiles of the platform frame rusted through from the inside if the new car was not protected by cavity sealing . The processing quality also left a lot to be desired at times (depending on the installation location).

technology

Chassis with chassis and engine
Characteristic gear stick

The longitudinally installed front-wheel drive set required a long bonnet and a relatively long wheelbase . The largely flat vehicle floor and the compact wheel suspensions with torsion bar springs and horizontal shock absorbers at the rear made good use of space in the above-average body. Thanks to the low curb weight , the output of 26 hp (19 kW) to 34 hp (25 kW) of the four-cylinder in-line engines with side camshafts and overhead valves was sufficient. In contrast to many other popular small cars of its time ( VW Beetle , Citroën 2CV , Fiat 500 ), the R4 was water-cooled . At first the cooling system was sealed. It had a platform frame to which the non-load-bearing body was bolted. The wheels were individually suspended and sprung with torsion bars , at the front on lower support levers with push struts and upper triangular links , at the rear on longitudinally built-in swing arms. The rear torsion bars were offset lengthways, so the left and right wheelbase differed by a few centimeters - as was the case with the Renault 5 , Renault 6 and Renault 16 models . As was common in French cars at the time, the suspension was designed to be very soft, and the headlight range could be adjusted with small levers on the headlights. The body got by with shallow drawing depths of the sheet metal and flat window panes all around, which helped to keep production costs low. The interior of the early models was extremely spartan with hardly any paneling and primitive tubular frame seats. As a luxury there was a fabric folding roof that could be opened halfway from the front and half from the back. The gearbox was shifted with a rod (round tube), which was guided above the motor, so-called crutch or turret shift.

The first Renault 4 had four drum brakes . Later models with a larger engine (depending on the country version 956 or 1108 cm³) had disc brakes on the front axle. In front of the engine, the gearbox with the differential gear and above it the rack and pinion steering were installed, which required a flat and long steering column that could penetrate the passenger compartment in a frontal collision and endanger the driver. A three-speed gearbox was installed by 1967, then one with four gears. The gear wheels of the fourth gear sat under an additional cover in front of the otherwise vertically longitudinally divided aluminum gear housing. Therefore it was a little longer and the front cross member was therefore angled forward . These transmissions had a "Z" shift pattern, that is, reverse gear and 1st gear were opposite each other. The input shaft protruded forward so the engine could be started with the jack crank inserted through the bumper and frame to the transmission. Cars produced from 1975 had the same gearboxes as the Renault 5 with gray cast iron housings and "H" gearshifts. They could not be started with a crank and therefore no longer had the characteristic hole in the bumper. The R4s of the first years of construction still had 6-volt on-board voltage, and the starter was operated via a push button on the dashboard. As early as the early 1970s, the vehicles had a brake force regulator and continuously adjustable backrests on the front seats.

The engine output was only marginally increased over the years, with the first vehicles built from 1961 from approx. 26 HP to 34 HP (from August 1970) by the end of production. In 1978 Renault also brought the R4 GTL with 1108 cm³ (normal version 845 cm³) onto the market, which offered more torque while maintaining the same maximum output, but consumed less. From 1983 the smaller models had only 29 HP for environmental reasons, only the GTL version had 34 HP. In Austria, all versions were delivered with 34 hp, after the introduction of the 3-way catalytic converter (with lambda probe), sales in Austria were discontinued. An exception was the Renault Rodéo , which first appeared on the market in autumn 1970 as Rodéo 4, also with 845 cm³. In autumn 1972 the Rodéo 6 followed, which had a displacement of 1108  cm³ and 45 hp. In the summer of 1981 the Rodéo 5 replaced both models with 1280 cm³ and 45 hp.

In October 1962, the conversion specialist Sinpar presented the first model of a Renault 4 converted to all-wheel drive at the Paris Motor Show with the approval of Renault . Renault was subsequently also responsible for the sales and maintenance of this vehicle. Initially, the conversion took place mainly on the type 4L and was continuously adapted to its changes during the long production period of the Renault 4. After Sinpar was taken over by Renault in 1980, this task was taken over by SOMAC (Société de Montage Autos Camions).

variants

Thanks to the platform frame, other bodies could also be mounted. Between mid-1965 and the end of 1992, the R4 was available as the Fourgonnette Renault 4 F4. It had the same payload / curb weight ratio as the station wagon, but 1.885 m³ of cargo space in the widened and raised body. Between the beginning of 1975 and the end of 1990 it was also available as the Renault 4 F6 with a 12 cm longer wheelbase and 20 cm longer body, and from 1968 to 1971 as a convertible (called R4 Plein Air) and from autumn 1970 to mid-1981 with a plastic body as the Renault Rodéo 4. A pick-up was also built.

In Colombia the R4 was also available with a 1289 cm³ engine from the R12 , which enabled speeds of up to 145 km / h. Sinpar provided the Renault R4 with switchable all-wheel drive in small series. The frame, chassis, transmission and, in part, the engine of the R4 were also used in the Renault 6 , which was manufactured from autumn 1968 to spring 1986 .

Renault 3

Renault 3 (1961-1962)

The Renault 3 - R3 for short - was the economy version of the Renault 4, which was only offered in France from September 1961 to August 1962. Equipped with a smaller engine of 603 cm³, it was classified in a cheaper French vehicle tax class. In addition to its more economical features, it was particularly characterized by the missing third side window between the C and D pillars .

However, the model did not establish itself on the market, which is why production was discontinued after just under a year.

Production numbers

Renault 4 Salü (1988)

Half a million Renault 4s had been produced by 1964, and by 1966 there were already a million vehicles. In December 1977 five million vehicles had already been produced, by 1986 there were 7.5 million.

The last models were sold in Germany at the end of 1988, as the R4 no longer met the stricter emission limits in Germany. Production for the German market ended with the Salü model , which was limited to 500 copies . The last R4 imported to Germany was bought new by Günther Jauch in 1988 and is now owned by Renault.

At the end of 1992, production of the Renault 4 in Colombia and Revoz in Slovenia was discontinued. By then, a total of 8,135,424 vehicles of the various R4 models had rolled off the assembly line.

In 1998 Renault launched the Kangoo, a vehicle that the press called the legitimate successor to the R4.

According to the final report of the Federal Office of Economics and Export Control , 54 Renault 4s were scrapped in favor of the environmental bonus between January 27, 2009 and July 31, 2010.

Remarks

  1. Quatrelle = [Renault] 4L.
  2. The preceding R stood for Régie (state enterprise), the first three digits denoted the project and the last digit the version.
  3. Number 4 results from the corresponding tax class .

literature

Web links

Commons : Renault 4  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. A life for the "Quatrelle" at spiegel.de, accessed on January 5, 2012
  2. Pourquoi VH? in: Ferrovissime No. 32, middle section “Les portraits du rail”, p. 10.
  3. Renault 4 - practicality on wheels. in: Motor vehicle technology 1/1962, pp. 24-27
  4. a b Autobild , No. 49, December 10, 2010, page 59
  5. 60 years of Renault 4: Gala in the Palais de Chaillot , accessed on September 21, 2021.
  6. Italian priest gives Pope Francis a 20-year-old Renault - BBC News . BBC. September 10, 2013. Archived from the original on July 29, 2016. Retrieved January 11, 2017.
  7. Renault 4 - practicality on wheels. in: Motor vehicle technology 1/1962, pp. 24-27
  8. Renault 4 Sinpar 4x4. la4ldesylvie.fr, accessed October 17, 2018 .
  9. Study on vans and small delivery vans. Automotive engineering 1/1965, pp. 17-18.
  10. Time to say goodby Franzose.de . Retrieved June 14, 2019.
  11. In the car with Günther Jauch - “I've never driven a Porsche. Ferrari doesn't appeal to me either ”. Retrieved September 21, 2021 .
  12. 50 years of Kultkiste: Jauch: That's why I love my R4. Retrieved September 21, 2021 .
  13. Ingo Meier: The fantastic four. In: Oldtimer Markt , July 2011 edition, pp. 12–20.
  14. Final report - environmental bonus. (PDF; 1.6 MB) Federal Office for Economics and Export Control and Federal Motor Transport Authority, November 1, 2010, accessed on October 9, 2013 .