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The EBR is an 8x8 wheeled reconnaissance vehicle based on the previous Panhard AM 40 P/Model 201, a light armored car born before the Second World War, but remained only at prototype level. After the war the new contest for a postwar armored car saw the Panhard proposal as winner against two other French firms.
Panhard AML-60 (50 units) Panhard M3 (6 to 8 units) Alvis Saladin (39 units) M8 Greyhound; Panhard EBR (51 units) M2 Half-track; M3 Half-track; Sexton Mk II; Carden Loyd tankette (6 units) M3 Stuart (80 units) Vickers 6-Ton (2 units) Grizzly I cruiser; Valentine Mk2 (36 units) M4A3E4 Sherman; M24 Chaffee (16 units) M47 Patton (150 units) M48 ...
In the early 1960s, the decision was taken to rebore the SA 49 to the internal dimensions of the D 921A 90 mm low-pressure rifled gun (CN 90 F1) of the AML-90, allowing the retroffited EBR to also use the powerful OCC 90 EMP Mle 61 fin-stabilized HEAT shell fired at a muzzle velocity of 750 m/s (2,500 ft/s). [2]
Panhard 165/175 – interwar four wheel design [41] Panhard 178 [31] Panhard AM40-P – interwar experimental eight wheel design [42] Panhard AML- 4x4 with 90 mm main armament; Panhard VBL Véhicule Blindé Léger – a modern French scout car designed for reconnaissance; VBC-90; Vextra 105 – a modern 8x8 design. White-Laffly AMD – World ...
French cold-war era Armoured personnel carrier The EBR ETT was a troop transport variant of Panhard’s EBR armoured car and it used many identical components. Testing of the two prototypes began in 1956 but the type was ultimately not used by France, although 28 were sold to Portugal, which is presumably where this example came from.
Panhard et Levassor (1887–1895). This model was the first registered automobile in Portugal Panhard et Levassor's Daimler Motor Carriage, 1894 12 h.p. Panhard, ca. 1902 1933 Panhard et Levassor X74 1937 Panhard et Levassor Dynamic 1955 DB Panhard HBR 1960 Panhard DB Le Mans 1964 Panhard 24CT
The AMX-13 is a French light tank produced from 1952 to 1987. It served with the French Army, as the Char 13t-75 Modèle 51, and was exported to more than 26 other nations.. Named after its initial weight of 13 tonnes, and featuring a tough and reliable chassis, [1] it was fitted with an oscillating turret built by GIAT Industries (now Nexter) with revolver-type magazines, which were also used ...
Companies Panhard and Saviem/Renault answered the requirement, and the Renault prototype was selected in May 1974, [11] with 4,000 units ordered. The first delivery occurred in 1976, and production continued at a rate of 30 to 40 units a month. [8] An armoured double-door at the rear allows access to the passenger compartment.