The Voisin Canard was an aircraft developed by Voisin brothers during 1910 and first flown early in 1911. It was named the Canard because of the resemblance of its forward fuselage to that of a duck's long neck while in flight.[1] It was originally flown as a landplane: with the addition of floats it became one of the first seaplanes used by the French Navy.

Voisin Canard
Voisin Canard floatplane being tested on the Seine, 3 August 1911. The front of the aircraft is on the right.
General information
National originFrance
ManufacturerFrères Voisin
Designer
History
Introduction date1911
First flightFebruary 1911

Design and development

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The Canard was, even by the standards of 1910, a curiously regressive design,[2] its layout reminiscent of Alberto Santos-Dumont's 14-bis of 1906.

As first flown at Issy-les-Moulineaux by Maurice Colliex, the aircraft had an uncovered fuselage of wire-braced wood construction with the 50 hp (37 kW) Rossel-Peugeot[3] rotary engine at the rear and the front-mounted control surfaces consisting of an all-moving elevator divided into two halves, one either side of the fuselage, a rectangular balanced rudder mounted above the elevator, and a pair of short-span fixed horizontal surfaces with a high angle of attack mounted behind and below the elevators. Voisin's characteristic side-curtains were fitted to the outermost pair of interplane struts and roll control was achieved using trailing-edge ailerons on both upper and lower wings.[4]

The aircraft was judged a success and Voisin manufactured a number of examples. There are variations between the individual production aircraft: the two examples flown in the French military aircraft trials in 1911 had a wingspan of 15 m (49 ft 3 in).;[5] one was powered by a 56 kW (75 hp) Renault and the second by a 97 kW (130 hp) Gnome. The number of sets of side curtains varied, some aircraft having two or even three sets.

Seaplane version

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La Foudre with one of her Voisin Canard seaplanes during tactical exercises in June 1912.

The seaplane variant, fitted with floats designed by Henri Fabre,[6] was initially built to the order of Prince Bibesco, who intended to use it make a flight across the Black Sea. It was first successfully flown from water on 25 April 1911.[7]

One example was bought by the French navy in March 1912 to equip the seaplane tender La Foudre, the first seaplane carrier in history.[8] A second example was delivered to the Navy in December 1913.[9]

Specifications

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Data from Flight, 30 December 1911 p.1137[10]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Capacity: 2[11]
  • Length: 7.9 m (26 ft)
  • Wingspan: 12 m (40 ft)
  • Wing area: 43.9 m2 (473 sq ft)
  • Gross weight: 549 kg (1,210 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Gnome 7-cylinder air-cooled radial, 52 kW (70 hp)

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 90 km/h (56 mph, 49 kn)

Notes

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  1. ^ Les Nouveaux Appareils "Voisin" l'Aérophile, 1 March 1911, p.10l
  2. ^ Gibbs-Smith, C. H. Aviation. London NMSI: 2003, p.193
  3. ^ A New Voisin Machine, Flight 14 January 1911
  4. ^ The New Voisin, Flight, 25 Feb 1911 p.167
  5. ^ Appareils Voisin l'Aérophile,15 October 1911, p.490
  6. ^ Further Trials with the Voisin Hydro-Aeroplane. Flight 19 August 1911, p.726
  7. ^ The Voisin Hydro-Aeroplane. Flight, 10 June 1911, p.511
  8. ^ Hallion, Richard: Taking Flight New York, Oxford University Press, 2003. p. 304 ISBN 9780195160352
  9. ^ Spooner, Stanley, ed. (13 December 1913). "French Navy Has Another Voisin Canard". Flight. 50 (259): 1363.
  10. ^ "The Voisin Canard"
  11. ^ Le "Canard" Voisin l'Aérophile 1 March 1911, p. 101

References

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Further reading

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  • Hartmann, Gérard. "Le grand concours d'aviation militaire de Reims 1911" [The Reims Military Aviation Competition, 1911] (PDF). Dossiers historiques et techniques aéronautique française (in French). Gérard Hartmann. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  • Moulin, Jean (October 2004). "Reims 1911, le premier concours d'appareils militaires au monde!" [Reims 1911, the First Military Aircraft Concours in the World!]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French) (139): 51–58. ISSN 1243-8650.
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