Avions Mauboussin

Avions Mauboussin
automobiles design and design and manufacture of aircraft
Fate acquired by Fouga
Successor Etablissements Fouga et Compagnie
Founded 1935
Headquarters France

Avions Mauboussin was a French aircraft manufacturer of the 1930s.

Formation

Pierre Mauboussin had been in partnership with Louis Peyret from 1928 and had jointly designed three types of light sporting aircraft. Mauboussin left the firm in 1933 after the death of Peyret and established his own aircraft design company. The company was acquired by Fouga in 1936, but continued to produce further designs until 1948.

Aircraft designs

A Mauboussin M.123 at Persan-Beaumont airfield, Paris, in June 1957
Mauboussin M.112 Corsaire (6 built, first original Peyret PM XII)[1]
Mauboussin M.120 Corsaire series
(over 100 built pre and postwar)[2]
Mauboussin M.40 Hemiptere
(1 single-seat double monoplane built in 1936)
Mauboussin M.200 series
(2 low-wing aircraft built 1939-1941)
Mauboussin M.300
(1 or 2 twin-engined low wing trainers built in 1948)

Surviving aircraft

Nine M.120 Corsaire series aircraft survived in French aircraft collections and museums during 2005.[3] A few examples are still airworthy.

References

Citations

  1. Castello, 1993, p.36
  2. Simpson, 2005, p. 137
  3. Ogden, 2006, p.558

Bibliography

  • Ogden, Bob (2006). Aviation Museums and Collections of Mainland Europe. Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd. ISBN 0-85130-375-7. 
  • Simpson, Rod (2005). The General Aviation Handbook. Midland Publishing. ISBN 1-85780-222-5. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.