Profile Photo
Jeff Groves
38 articles

Ostmodels Char 2C Super-Heavy Tank

September 3, 2019 · in Armor · · 5 · 3.9K

This is the Char 2C Super-Heavy Tank, available as a kit in scale from . The main hull is cast as one large piece which is a very good thing. The model builds up quickly and is a good representation of the original. It is quite big, I have posed it with Trumpeter's Char 1B to give an indication of its size. If you like building unusual subjects this one certainly fits the bill.

The FCM Char 2C was the result of a specification issued in 1916 by the General Headquarters of the French Army for a heavy breakthrough tank. The tank was to be heavily armored and able to cross trenches 4 meters (13 feet) wide. In 1918 the French ordered the manufacture of 300 units to be ready in time for the 1919 Spring offensive, but with the Armistice in November 1918 all urgency was removed. Only ten Char 2C were eventually completed, the last being delivered to the French Army in 1923.
To this day, the Char2C is arguably the largest production tank ever to enter military service. With a weight of 76 tons (69 metric tonnes) and a length of almost 34 feet (10.3 meters) it is a monster. The front and turret were protected with 35 mm armor, with 21 mm plate on the sides. Maximum speed was 15 kph.
Being represented as "land battleships", the tanks were numbered and named after regions of France. These were 90 Poitou, 91 Provence, 92 Picardie, 93 Alsace, 94 Bretagne, 95 Touraine, 96 Anjou, 97 Normandie, 98 Berry, and 99 Champagne. In the fall of 1939 Normandie was up-armored in an effort to render her immune to German guns and re-named Lorraine. She emerged with fontal armor 90 mm thick and a weight of 84 tons (76 metric tonnes).
The Char 2C design had immense propaganda value for the French in the years between the wars, but by 1939 it was obsolete. Despite their limitations, the ten Char 2C were mobilized to form the 51st Bataillon de Chars de Combat to defend against the German invasion. Six of the tanks were immobilized by a fire while being transported by rail. With no way to move the tanks, they were destroyed by their own crews to prevent them from falling into German hands. One tank, the Champaigne, was captured intact by the Germans and returned to Berlin as a war prize. The Char 2C never actually saw combat.

History and kit review here: https://inchhighguy.wordpress.com/2019/07/10/french-char-2c-super-heavy-tank-description-and-kit-review/

Build thread here: https://inchhighguy.wordpress.com/2019/08/02/ostmodels-resin-french-char-2c-super-heavy-tank-build-in-1-72-scale/

Reader reactions:
6  Awesome

12 additional images. Click to enlarge.


5 responses

  1. Nice work - those outdoor shots really "sell it".. 🙂

  2. Interesting vehicle, nicely done !

  3. Very nice work. Apparently the tank was captured by the Russians after the fall of Berlin and taken to the Soviet Union. It may still exist somewhere.

  4. Thanks for the kind words guys, much appreciated!

  5. Fantastic job on this unique vehicle!

Leave a Reply