Type VI | |
---|---|
Breguet and around 10 passengers above the airport of Douai in March 1911 | |
Role | |
Manufacturer | Bréguet |
Designer | Louis Breguet |
First flight | 1911 |
The Breguet Type IV was an aircraft built by Breguet Aviation. It was first flown in 1911, and was the first Breguet aircraft to be produced in quantity. It was used by the French Army and the British Royal Flying Corps. It is notable for the extensive use of metal in its construction, unusual in an aircraft of its time.
The Bréguet Type IV was developed from the Bréguet Type III which had appeared during 1910. It was a tractor biplane with a tricycle undercarriage.
The Bréguet Type IV was produced in a number of variants, differing in their seating arrangement and in the engine fitted. Although Bréguet's earlier aircraft were referred to using a type number, the aircraft produced after the Type III were generally referred to using an airframe number and a letter/number combination denoting the type of engine fitted. [1]
An example, an R.U.1, is on display at the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris.
Data from Flight, 22 July 1911, p. 625 [2]
General characteristics
Type VI | |
---|---|
Breguet and around 10 passengers above the airport of Douai in March 1911 | |
Role | |
Manufacturer | Bréguet |
Designer | Louis Breguet |
First flight | 1911 |
The Breguet Type IV was an aircraft built by Breguet Aviation. It was first flown in 1911, and was the first Breguet aircraft to be produced in quantity. It was used by the French Army and the British Royal Flying Corps. It is notable for the extensive use of metal in its construction, unusual in an aircraft of its time.
The Bréguet Type IV was developed from the Bréguet Type III which had appeared during 1910. It was a tractor biplane with a tricycle undercarriage.
The Bréguet Type IV was produced in a number of variants, differing in their seating arrangement and in the engine fitted. Although Bréguet's earlier aircraft were referred to using a type number, the aircraft produced after the Type III were generally referred to using an airframe number and a letter/number combination denoting the type of engine fitted. [1]
An example, an R.U.1, is on display at the Musée des Arts et Métiers in Paris.
Data from Flight, 22 July 1911, p. 625 [2]
General characteristics