The Fauvel AV.31 was a design for a French flying wing airliner conceived by Charles Fauvel in the early 1940s.
Fauvel AV.31 | |
---|---|
Role | Flying wing |
National origin | France |
Designer | Charles Fauvel |
First flight | none |
Number built | 0 |
Design and development
editThe AV.31 was a giant transport plane with a wingspan of 295 feet (90 meters) and a take-off weight of 200 tonnes. All the passengers, fuel, and engines were situated in the wing, reducing the cockpit to a small nacelle in front of the wing. The passenger cabin, fully submerged in the wing, was 27 m long and 9 m wide, and could accommodate a variety of layouts. A bomber version was proposed as the AV.32.[1]
To test the flight characteristics of the AV.31, Charles Fauvel proposed a 1/3 scale flying model, which would have been propelled by four 250 hp "Béarn" engines and had a span of 104 feet (32 m), a take-off weight of 8150 kg, and maximum speed of 354 km/h.
The AV.31, despite its great potential, did not leave the drawing board.
References
editSee also
editAircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era
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