As the French Army turned elsewhere for their future tank acquisition, Renault turned to the export market to sell his design. It received the index NC-27 and followed the NC-1 pattern. The NC-2 is sometimes claimed to have been marketed for export as the
NC-31, and that such were built for China, but this is incorrect. The NC-2 pattern remained as a single prototype. By the end of the decade, Renault had managed to sell the vehicle in limited numbers, but it never became a major export vehicle akin to the
Renault FT.
Poland The first buyer of NC-27 tanks was Poland, which ordered one tank in 1928, along with five Renault
FT Kégresse. The tanks were trialed along each other, but after lengthy trials, the Poles declined any further purchases. The Polish already had more than 150 Renault FT tanks, and the improvements offered by the NC and FT Kégresse were not sufficient to warrant a purchase.
Sweden: stridsvagn fm/28 In 1928 a single NC prototype was bought by
Sweden as an experimental tank, designated (
strv fm/28), . The tank was bought due to indigenous tank development dragging on, leading to the purchase in order evaluate alternatives. The NC-design showed its issues from the very start. The gearbox and clutch were not reliable and the suspension was not suited for Swedish terrain. The trials resulted in no further interest, and instead convinced the Swedish Army that tanks had to be developed locally and not bought elsewhere. The vehicle, however, ended up being useful for more than just trials. The tactical and technical requirements for a new tank were composed after studying the fm/28, and the vehicle came to serve as a training tank for some time. The sole strv fm/28 still survives and is today displayed at the Swedish tank museum
Arsenalen in
Strängnäs Sweden. File:Strv fm28 2.jpg|The strv fm/28 in forested winter terrain during trials File:Strv fm28 6.jpg|The strv fm/28 driving in a creek during winter trials File:Strv fm28 1.jpg|The strv fm/28 having collapsed a bridge and fallen over during trials
Japan: Type 89 Otsu-Gata Sensha In 1929, Renault obtained an order of ten vehicles for Japan, who, in wait of indigenous tank-development, bought the entire remaining stock of 10 vehicles to backup their aging Renault FT tanks; the FT:s then being designated "Renault A-type tank" (,
Renault Ko-Gata Sensha), and the NC:s "Renault B-type tank" (,
Renault Otsu-Gata Sensha). In 1930, Japan received the Renault NC tanks ordered. Due to the same design issues that Sweden encountered, the Japanese took it on to themselves to correct the drawbacks of the imported tanks. According to French sources, the tanks, indexed
Type 89, received more powerful Mitsubishi engines of 75 hp, enough to accelerate the tank to 20 kph. The 37 mm SA 18 cannons were replaced with
Type 11 37 mm infantry guns or 6.5 mm
Type 1 heavy machine guns or
Type 3 heavy machine guns. The gun shared an ancestor with the SA 18: the French
Canon d'Infanterie de 37 modèle 1916 TRP, however, it was more powerful, and could be used in an anti-tank role. As a result, the Type 89 was the most heavily armed tank from the Renault FT family. File:Otsu-Gata Sensha (male).jpg|Otsu-Gata Sensha with a
37 mm Type 11 cannon File:Renault Otsu.jpg|Otsu-Gata Sensha with a
6.5 mm Type 1 machine gun (closest) File:Renault otsu gata Type 3 MG.jpg|Otsu-Gata Sensha with a
6.5 mm Type 3 machine gun captured by USA == See also ==