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French Army assault glider From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Fouga CM.10 was an assault glider designed for the French Army shortly after World War II, capable of carrying 35 troops, later converted as a powered transport.
CM.10 | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Airliner |
Manufacturer | Fouga |
Designer | Robert Castello |
Number built | 7 |
History | |
First flight | 7 June 1947 |
The CM.10 was a high-wing cantilever monoplane of conventional configuration with fixed tricycle undercarriage. Flight trials with the glider prototypes were of mixed results with the first prototype crashing on 5 May 1948 whilst being flown by CEV Brétigny. A production order for 100 was placed with Fouga, but cancelled after only 5 gliders had been built.[1]
Undaunted, Fouga adapted the design as an airliner, adding two SNECMA 12S piston engines. Two of the production CM.10 gliders were converted to the powered version, CM.100-01, the first prototype (registration F-WFAV), was first flown on 19 January 1949, but no order resulted for this aircraft. It was later tested with Turbomeca Piméné turbojets mounted on the wingtips as the CM.101R-01. The second aircraft, which was converted as CM.101R-02, (registration F-WFAV), was first flown on 23 Aug 1951.[1]
A proposed military transport derivative with Turbomeca Marboré wing-tip auxiliary turbojets.[1]
Data from [1]
General characteristics
Performance
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
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