Renault 8

Renault 8 / 10
Manufacturer Renault
Also called Renault 10
Dacia 1100
Bulgarrenault 8/10
Production 1962–1973 (Renault 8)
1965–1971 (Renault 10)

1965–1976 (Spanish Renault 8)
1966–1970 (BG - Bulgarrenault)
1968–1971 (RO - Dacia)
Assembly Flins, France
Mariara, Venezuela
Plovdiv, Bulgaria
Valladolid, Spain
Mioveni, Romania
Ciudad Sahagun, Mexico
Heidelberg, Australia
Casablanca, Morocco[1]
St. Bruno, Quebec, Canada
Algiers, Algeria (CARAL)
Predecessor Renault Dauphine
Successor Renault 6
Class Small family car, Compact
Body style 4-door sedan
Layout RR layout
Engine 956 cc I4
1108 cc I4
1255 cc I4
1289 cc I4
Transmission 3-speed manual
4-speed manual
5-speed manual
Wheelbase 2,270 mm (89.4 in)[2]
Length 4,000 mm (157.5 in)
Renault 8
4,200 mm (165.4 in)
Renault 10[3]
Width 1,490 mm (58.7 in)
Height 1,375 mm (54.1 in)[3]

The Renault 8 (Renault R8 until 1964) and Renault 10 are two small family cars produced by the French manufacturer Renault in the 1960s and early 1970s.

The 8 was launched in 1962, and the 10, a more upmarket version of the 8, was launched in 1965. The Renault 8 ceased production and sales in France in 1973. By then the Renault 10 had already been replaced, two years earlier, by the front wheel drive Renault 12.

They were produced in Bulgaria until 1970 (see Bulgarrenault), and an adapted version of the Renault 8 continued to be produced in Spain until 1976. In Romania, a version of the 8 was produced under license between 1968 and 1971 as the Dacia 1100.

The 8 design looks very similar to the Alfa Romeo front-wheel drive prototype tipo 103[1] (1960), because Alfa Romeo and Renault had a business relationship in the 1950s and 1960s. Renault was marketing Alfa Romeo cars and Alfa Romeo was building the Renault Dauphine (1959–1964), Ondine (an up-market version of the Dauphine) (1961–1962) and R4 (1962–1964) under license in Italy. In total 70,502 Dauphine/Ondine and 41,809 R4's were built by Alfa Romeo.[4]

Contents

Renault R8 launch

The R8 (model R1130) was released in June 1962[2] and was based on the Renault Dauphine with which it shared its basic architecture and its 2,270 mm (89.4 in) wheelbase. The style, closely following that of the first prototype produced, at unusually short notice, by Philippe Charbonneaux, was fashionably boxy, however;[2] while the Renault 8 was actually 30 mm (1.2 in) narrower than the Dauphine, the manufacturer was able to install thick cushioned front seats that were actually each 60 mm (2.4 in) wider, at 560 mm (22.0 in), than those fitted in the Dauphine.[2] The R8's engine followed the pioneering example of the recently introduced Renault 4 by incorporating a sealed for life cooling system.[2] A distinctive innovation on the French produced cars was the fitting of four-wheel disc brakes, a first for a saloon/sedan car of this size.[2] However, when in 1965 Renault's Spanish affiliate [5] introduced their own version of the Renault 8 for the (then tariff-shielded) Spanish market, it came with drum brakes.

The 8 was powered by an all new 956 cc engine developing 44 PS (32 kW; 43 hp).

More power

A more powerful model, the 8 Major (model R1132) , was released in 1964, featuring an 1108 cc engine developing 50 PS (37 kW; 49 hp). A still more powerful version, the 8 model R1134 Gordini, was also released that year, with a tuned engine of the same capacity but developing 90 PS (66 kW; 89 hp) and with a five-speed close ratio manual transmission. The Gordini was originally available only in blue, with two stick-on white stripes. In 1965, the Renault 10 Major, a more luxurious version of the 8 with different front and rear styling, was released, replacing the 8 Major. Early R10 had round headlights.[6]

Renault 10

In September 1965 the Renault 10 Major (branded in some markets as the Renault 1100) was launched, replacing the Renault 8 Major. This was a lengthened version of the Renault 8 with an increased front overhang and a much enlarged front luggage compartment, its capacity increased from 240 to 315 litres. The dimensions of the central passenger cabin were unchanged, however. The 1,108 cm³ engine, which for some markets had already appeared in top of the range versions of the Renault 8, came from the Renault Caravelle. In the French market the Renault 10 found itself struggling to compete with the successful Peugeot 204 introduced in the same year, and just two years after launch the 10 itself was facelifted, rectangular headlights now further differentiating it from the Renault 8. French production of the Renault 10 ceased in 1971, when the model was replaced by the commercially more successful Renault 12.

Alongside the Renault 10, less powerful versions of the Renault 8 continued in production at the Flins plant with the existing shorter body.

Renault 8 facelift

In 1967, the R8 Gordini (model R1135) received a facelift including two additional headlights, and its engine upgraded to a 1255 cc unit rated at 100 PS (74 kW; 99 hp). Both the 8 and the 10 were heavily revised for 1969. Some of the 10's features being incorporated in the 8, resulting in a new 8 Major which replaced the basic model. The changes also saw the addition of the 8S, a sportier model with a 1108 cc engine rated at 60 PS (44 kW; 59 hp). 8S model also had twin headlights - the middle ones were for high beam only. The car was delivered with black "RENAULT 8S" tapes, intended for the rear wings but their fixing was left to the customer. A larger unit, the 1289 cc engine from the new Renault 12, was added in 1970, giving birth to the R10 1300.

The end

Although production of the Renault 10 ended in 1971, the 8 was still sold in France as late as 1973. FASA-Renault, the company's Spanish arm, continued to produce models 8 and 8TS (similar to the French-built 8S) until 1976 for the Spanish market, and components for the 8S and 8TS assembled in Mexico.

Award

In 1963 the Renault 8 was awarded Wheels Magazine Australia's Car of the Year Award.

Semi-automatic transmission

For 1963 (initially only in France), Renault offered a semi-automatic transmission of unique design, developed and produced by Jaeger.[7] Although it was described as a form automatic transmission at the time, in retrospect it was more realistically a form of automatic clutch, inspired by the German Saxomat device which appeared as an option on several mainstream German cars in the 1950s and 60s.

The clutch in the system was replaced by a powder ferromagnetic coupler, while the transmission itself was a three-speed mechanical unit similar to that of the Dauphine—but from the beginning, in this form, with synchromesh on all gears.

The system used a dash-mounted push button control panel where the driver could select forward or reverse and a governor that sensed vehicle speed and throttle position.

A "relay case" containing electromagnetic switches received signals from the governor and push buttons and then controlled a coupler, a decelerator to close the throttle during gear changes, and a solenoid to select operation of the reverse-first or second-third shift rail, using a reversible electric motor to engage the gears. The system was thus entirely electromechanical, without hydraulics, pneumatics or electronics.

Benefits included comparable fuel economy to the manual transmission version, and easy adaptability to the car. Drawbacks included performance loss (with only three available gears) and a somewhat jerky operation during gear changes.

The transmission was also used in the Dauphine and the Caravelle.

Use in films

The Renault 10 was a particular favourite among French film makers as the rear-engined layout allowed a camera tripod to be fitted in the front boot in front of the windscreen to film people talking to each other while driving.

References

  1. ^ "Somaca Casablanca". Somaca.e-monsite.com. http://somaca.e-monsite.com/. Retrieved 19 April 2010. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Automobilia". Toutes les voitures françaises 1962 (salon Paris oct 1961) (Paris: Histoire & collections) Nr. 19: Page 57. 2001. 
  3. ^ a b "Autotest: Renault 10 (1,289 c.c.) Latest version of Renault's rear-engined medium-small family saloon, with new longer-stroke four-cylinder engine. Lively performance, without fuss. Light controls, very efficient brakes. Directional stability poor in side winds, but cornering good. Quiet, comfortable and economical small car.". Autocar. 132 (nbr3855): pages 6–10. 1 January 1970. 
  4. ^ Tim Rauen. "Tim's Alfa Romeo Page - Alfasud". Alfasud.alfisti.net. http://alfasud.alfisti.net/ase.htm. Retrieved 2010-10-20. 
  5. ^ Fasa-Renault was a partnership between Renault and Spain which produced cars for the Spanish market subject to government requirements for a high proportion of local content which meant, at this stage, that Spanish built Renaults were not considered suitable for other European markets. Things changed after the death of Francisco Franco when Spain joined the EEC and the Spanish auto-market was integrated into that of the rest of western Europe.
  6. ^ "History Renault 8/10". Web.archive.org. 2009-10-27. http://web.archive.org/web/20091027103915/http://geocities.com/motorcity/show/9396/r8/hist8.htm. Retrieved 2011-08-27. 
  7. ^ Renault magazine du centenaire, octobre 1998.

External links