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Fábrica Argentina de Aviones

31°26′35.6″S 64°16′20.9″W / 31.443222°S 64.272472°W / -31.443222; -64.272472

Fábrica Argentina de Aviones "Brigadier San Martín" S.A.
FormerlyFábrica Militar de Aviones (1927–1943)
Instituto Aerotécnico (1943–2009)[1]
Company typeSociedad Anónima
IndustryAerospace, Defense
Founded1927; 97 years ago (1927)
FounderFrancisco de Arteaga [1]
HeadquartersCórdoba, Argentina
Key people
Matías Julián Savoca (chairman)[2]
ProductsAircraft, aircraft components, aircraft maintenance and services
OwnerGovernment of Argentina (2009–present)[1]
Number of employees
1,600 (as of June 2014)
ParentLockheed Martin (1995–2009)
Websitefadeasa.com.ar

The Fábrica Argentina de Aviones SA (FAdeA), officially Fábrica Argentina de Aviones "Brigadier San Martín" S.A., is Argentina's main aircraft manufacturer. Founded on 10 October 1927 and located in Córdoba, for most of its existence it was known as Fábrica Militar de Aviones (FMA), until its privatization in the 1990s to Lockheed Martin. In 2009 the concession ended and the company is now wholly owned by the Argentine government.

History edit

 
1930s view of the FMA workshop
 
Late 1940s view of the FMA/IAe "Hangar 90" production line: I.Ae.22 DL (back) and I.Ae.24 Calquín (front)
 
1960s view of the production line: Morane Saulnier 760

Formed on 10 October 1927 and on 18 July 1928 ends the construction and testing begins on the track the first domestically produced aircraft: the license built Avro 504 Gosport training aircraft equipped with a 100 hp (75 kW) Gnome engine. It had a speed of 140 km/h with a flying endurance of 2 hours. A series of indigenous and foreign designs followed, mostly for military use.

The factory is known for producing the first jet fighter aircraft in Latin America: the Pulqui I (1947) and the Pulqui II (1950) under the direction of engineers Emile Dewoitine (French) and Kurt Tank (German) respectively.

In the 1960s produced the Guarani light transport and the Pucara COIN aircraft, followed by the Pampa jet trainer in the 1980s; the last two still in service with the Argentine Air Force as of early 2016.

Privatization (1995) edit

In 1995, FMA was privatized by the government of Carlos Menem and from that year until March 2009 it operated as a concession to LAASA (Lockheed Aircraft Argentina SA, a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation). Under the terms of the privatization agreement LAASA would operate it for 25 years, which could be renewed for two 10 year periods.

During this period the activity was mostly focused in maintenance and upgrades of existing aircraft in service with the Argentine Air Force.

Nationalization (2010) edit

During the government of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner the factory was nationalized in August 2009, with compensation of ARS $67 million paid. The text of the expropriation law provides that "the State cannot divest itself of majority shareholdings or the power to make decisions at the factory."[3][4]

It was renamed after Argentine Air Force Brigadier es:Juan Ignacio San Martín a military engineer who laid the foundations of the aeronautics industry at Córdoba when he directed the Instituto Aerotécnico, the forerunner of the FMA, in the 1940s.

The United States Department of State announced that effective 18 December 2009, Lockheed Martin Aircraft Argentina would be renamed to Fábrica Argentina de Aviones "Brigadier San Martin" S.A. and divested to the Government of Argentina.[5]

Aircraft design and production edit

 
AeMB.2 Bombi bombers in flight
 
Pulqui I prototype in flight (c.1951)
 
I.Ae. 33 Pulqui II
 
DINFIA IA 35 Huanquero, utility aircraft designed in the early 1950s
 
Prototype IA 38 Naranjero under construction, early 1960s
 
IA 46 ‘’Super Ranquel’’ at San Justo airfield (Buenos Aires), April 1975
 
I.A. 50 Guarani II
 
I.A. 58 Pucará
 
I.A. 63 Pampa II

The FMA has produced innovative aircraft prototypes, but the state of the Argentine economy has usually prevented most of them from entering large-scale production. Nevertheless the FMA has managed to put several aircraft types of more conventional designs into full productions. It also engaged in production of licensed aircraft from other countries.

The prefixes used for the aircraft locally developed (and produced) are:

  • Ae, for "Dirección General de Aerotécnica", on the first period (1927–1936);
  • F.M.A., for "Fábrica Militar de Aviones", on the second period (1938–1943);
  • I.Ae., for "Instituto Aerotécnico", on the third period (1943–1952);
  • IA, for "Instituto Aerotécnico", on the fourth (current) period (1952 to present).

List of aircraft manufactured, projected, or upgraded edit

Year Model Built Obs
Started as Instituto Aerotécnico
1928 Avro 504K Gosport 31 Biplane basic trainer, license-built. First aircraft produced by FMA.
1930 Dewoitine D.21 35 Monoplane fighter, license-built.
1931 FMA AeC.1 1 Civil tourism aircraft prototype (initial version); basic trainer (later version). First local design.
1932 FMA AeC.2 2 Civil tourism aircraft
1932 FMA AeME.1 7 Basic military trainer
1933 FMA AeT.1 3 Transport/commercial aircraft
1934 FMA AeMO.1 41 Observation monoplane
1934 FMA AeMOe.1 6 Derivative of the AeMO.1, observation and training aircraft
1934 FMA AeMOe.2 61 Variant of the AeMOe.1, observation and training aircraft
1934 FMA AeC.3 16 Civil aircraft.
1935 FMA AeMB.1 1 First bomber built by FMA.
1935 FMA AeMB.2 14 Bomber.
1935 FMA AeMS.1 1 Ambulance aircraft
1936 FMA AeC.3G 1 Tourism aircraft.
1936 FMA AeC.4 1 Improved prototype version of the C.3G
Name changed to Fabrica Militar de Aviones
1940 Curtiss Hawk 75O 20 License built version of the US monoplane fighter Curtiss Hawk 75[6]
1940 Focke-Wulf Fw 44J Stieglitz 190 License built version of the German biplane trainer
1940 FMA I.Ae.20 El Boyero 130 Tourism aircraft, series built by Industrias Petrolini
1943 FMA I.Ae.21 1 Advanced trainer aircraft prototype, based on the North American NA-16-1P fuselage.
1943 FMA I.Ae.22 DL 206 Advanced trainer aircraft
1945 FMA I.Ae.23 1 Basic trainer prototype, based on the Focke-Wulf Fw44J
1946 FMA I.Ae.24 Calquín 100 Attack/Light bomber
1945 FMA I.Ae.25 Mañque 1 Assault/Transport glider.
1947 FMA I.Ae.27 Pulqui 1 Jet fighter prototype, first of its kind built in Latin America.
1947 FMA I.Ae.28 Super Calquín 0 Merlin-powered development of Calquin, abandoned in favour of I.Ae. 30 Ñancú.
1948 FMA I.Ae.30 Ñancú 1 Fighter/Attack prototype
1947 FMA I.Ae.31 Colibrí 3 Two-seat Trainer aircraft
1949 FMA I.Ae.32 Chingolo 1 Tourism/Trainer aircraft
1950 FMA I.Ae.33 Pulqui II 5 First swept-wing jet fighter designed in Latin America
1949 FMA I.Ae.34 Clen Antú 7 Flying wing sailplane designed by Reimar Horten, also known as the Horten XVa and XVb
1953 FMA I.Ae.35 Huanquero/Constancia/Pandora 36 Twin engine transport aircraft.
1960 FMA I.Ae.35 Guaraní I 1 Approximate date, transport derived from the I.Ae. 35 Huanquero
1951 FMA I.Ae.36 Cóndor 0 Cancelled Kurt Tank civil passenger transport project.
1954 FMA I.Ae.37 1 Supersonic delta-wing interceptor, Unpowered glider prototype only.
1960 FMA I.Ae.38 Naranjero 1 Prototype flying-wing cargo transport.
mid-1950s FMA I.Ae.39 0 Cancelled transport project based on the I.Ae.35.
1956 FMA I.Ae.40 0 Cancelled night fighter project.
1953 FMA I.Ae.41 Urubú 4 Flying-wing glider, designed by Reimar Horten, also known as the Horten XVc.
1953 FMA I.Ae.43 Pulqui III 0 Cancelled swept-wing supersonic jet fighter project
1953 FMA IAe.44 DL.II 0 Cancelled advanced trainer project
1959 FMA I.Ae.45 Querandí 2 Executive transport prototype (Some sources give 1957 and 1 built)
1957 FMA I.Ae.46 Ranquel 217 2-seat utility aircraft. Second series, developed into Super Ranquel.
1960 FMA I.Ae.48 0 Cancelled supersonic delta-wing all-weather interceptor
1963 DINFIA IA 50 Guaraní II 35 Transport derived from IA 35 Guaraní I
Beechcraft T-34 Mentor 75 Licence-built trainer.
1965 IA 53 Mamboretá 2 Agricultural aircraft
1960 Morane-Saulnier MS.760 Paris 48 Licence-built trainer.
1967 FMA IA 58 Pucará 120 Counter-insurgency/light attack aircraft
1985 FMA IA 58C Pucará "Charlie" 1 Single seater with 30 mm (1.2 in) DEFA cannon, air-to-surface missiles. Cancelled after prototype flown.
1972 FMA IA 59 1 UAV prototype
1975 FMA IA 60 0 Cancelled advanced trainer/light attack project[7]
1978 FMA IA 62 0 Cancelled military trainer project
1984 FMA IA 63 Pampa 32 Advanced trainer. AT-63 currently[when?] under production.
1980 FMA IA 66 Pucará II 1 Single prototype; converted IA-58A powered by two 1,000-ehp (746-kW) Garrett TPE331-11-601W turboprop engines.
(mid-1980s) IA 67 Córdoba 0 Cancelled light transport project[8]
(mid-1980s) IA 68 ATL 0 Cancelled light transport project[citation needed]
(mid-1980s) FMA SAIA 90 0 Cancelled Supersonic air superiority jet fighter project
1990 FMA IA 70
Embraer/FMA CBA 123 Vector
2 Cancelled 19-passenger turboprop airliner[9]
Name changed to Lockheed Martin Aircraft Argentina SA
1999 Lockheed Martin A-4AR Fightinghawk 18 Another 18 by Lockheed Martin in Pasadena, California, US.
2003 Beechcraft T-34 Mentor Refurbishment of Argentine and Bolivia Air Forces
2006 Lockheed C-130 Hercules Refurbishment of Argentine Air Force and Colombian Air Force aircraft.
Name changed to FAdeA S.A.
2009 FMA IA 63 Pampa II-40 Changing power plant
2010 FMA IA 58 Pucará 1 Changing power plant and avionics (cancelled)
2010 FAdeA IA 73 Basic trainer to replace the T-34 (cancelled)
2014 FAdeA IA 100 1 Elemental trainer and a project to demonstrate the capabilities of the Argentine industry
2018 IA 63 Pampa III Block I 6 Third evolution of the Pampa aircraft, with 3 more in order for 2019 for the Argentine Air Force.

Gallery edit

Local designs edit

Manufactured under license edit

Engines edit

See also edit

Other aircraft manufacturers in Argentina

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Historia on FADEA website
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 December 2014. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
  3. ^ Back at the hands of the state
  4. ^ (in Spanish)Ministerio de Defensa - República Argentina 2012-10-07 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Lockheed Martin Aircraft Argentina SA to Fábrica Argentina de Aviones “Brigadier San Martin” S.A.
  6. ^ Padin 1999, pp. 9, 15
  7. ^ (in Spanish)"FMA IA-60 - Anteproyecto de Avión de Entrenamiento y Ataque" - website "Zona Militar" (accessed 2015-06-08)
  8. ^ Aeroespacio magazine Nr.566 (Jul-Ago 2005), Ficha Técnica Nr.53
  9. ^ CBA123/IA 70 2010-09-12 at the Wayback Machine

Bibliography edit

  • Bellomo, Sergio; Cordon Aguirre, Arturo; Marino, Atilio; Núñez Padin, Jorge (1999). Núñez Padin, Jorge Felix (ed.). Curtiss Hawk. Serie Fuerza Aérea Argentina (in Spanish). Vol. 5. Bahía Blanca, Argentina: Fuerzas Aeronavales.
  • Arreguez, Angel Cesar (2008). Mansur, Sergio Luis (ed.). Fabrica Militar de Aviones: Cronicas y Testimonios (in Spanish) (Second ed.). Cordoba, Argentina: Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnologia de la Provincia de Cordoba. ISBN 978-987-24620-0-0.

Further reading edit

  • (in Spanish) , retrieved 2010-01-18 (PDF file available for download). Published in 2007 by Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología de la Provincia de Córdoba, Argentina (Córdoba's Province Science and Technology Ministry)
  • (in Spanish) La Argentina fabricante de Aviones (retrieved 2016-04-23)

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • "Argentina's FAdeA Mulls Major Changes" - Jane's IHS
  • FMA history
  • Aeromilitaria.com.ar (in Spanish)
  • "Former Lockheed Martin Argentina plant relaunched as FAdeA" FlightGlobal

fábrica, argentina, aviones, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Fabrica Argentina de Aviones news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message 31 26 35 6 S 64 16 20 9 W 31 443222 S 64 272472 W 31 443222 64 272472 Fabrica Argentina de Aviones Brigadier San Martin S A FormerlyFabrica Militar de Aviones 1927 1943 Instituto Aerotecnico 1943 2009 1 Company typeSociedad AnonimaIndustryAerospace DefenseFounded1927 97 years ago 1927 FounderFrancisco de Arteaga 1 HeadquartersCordoba ArgentinaKey peopleMatias Julian Savoca chairman 2 ProductsAircraft aircraft components aircraft maintenance and servicesOwnerGovernment of Argentina 2009 present 1 Number of employees1 600 as of June 2014 ParentLockheed Martin 1995 2009 Websitefadeasa com ar The Fabrica Argentina de Aviones SA FAdeA officially Fabrica Argentina de Aviones Brigadier San Martin S A is Argentina s main aircraft manufacturer Founded on 10 October 1927 and located in Cordoba for most of its existence it was known as Fabrica Militar de Aviones FMA until its privatization in the 1990s to Lockheed Martin In 2009 the concession ended and the company is now wholly owned by the Argentine government Contents 1 History 1 1 Privatization 1995 1 2 Nationalization 2010 2 Aircraft design and production 2 1 List of aircraft manufactured projected or upgraded 3 Gallery 3 1 Local designs 3 2 Manufactured under license 3 3 Engines 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp 1930s view of the FMA workshop nbsp Late 1940s view of the FMA IAe Hangar 90 production line I Ae 22 DL back and I Ae 24 Calquin front nbsp 1960s view of the production line Morane Saulnier 760 Formed on 10 October 1927 and on 18 July 1928 ends the construction and testing begins on the track the first domestically produced aircraft the license built Avro 504 Gosport training aircraft equipped with a 100 hp 75 kW Gnome engine It had a speed of 140 km h with a flying endurance of 2 hours A series of indigenous and foreign designs followed mostly for military use The factory is known for producing the first jet fighter aircraft in Latin America the Pulqui I 1947 and the Pulqui II 1950 under the direction of engineers Emile Dewoitine French and Kurt Tank German respectively In the 1960s produced the Guarani light transport and the Pucara COIN aircraft followed by the Pampa jet trainer in the 1980s the last two still in service with the Argentine Air Force as of early 2016 Privatization 1995 edit In 1995 FMA was privatized by the government of Carlos Menem and from that year until March 2009 it operated as a concession to LAASA Lockheed Aircraft Argentina SA a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation Under the terms of the privatization agreement LAASA would operate it for 25 years which could be renewed for two 10 year periods During this period the activity was mostly focused in maintenance and upgrades of existing aircraft in service with the Argentine Air Force Nationalization 2010 edit During the government of Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner the factory was nationalized in August 2009 with compensation of ARS 67 million paid The text of the expropriation law provides that the State cannot divest itself of majority shareholdings or the power to make decisions at the factory 3 4 It was renamed after Argentine Air Force Brigadier es Juan Ignacio San Martin a military engineer who laid the foundations of the aeronautics industry at Cordoba when he directed the Instituto Aerotecnico the forerunner of the FMA in the 1940s The United States Department of State announced that effective 18 December 2009 Lockheed Martin Aircraft Argentina would be renamed to Fabrica Argentina de Aviones Brigadier San Martin S A and divested to the Government of Argentina 5 Aircraft design and production edit nbsp AeMB 2 Bombi bombers in flight nbsp Pulqui I prototype in flight c 1951 nbsp I Ae 33 Pulqui II nbsp DINFIA IA 35 Huanquero utility aircraft designed in the early 1950s nbsp Prototype IA 38 Naranjero under construction early 1960s nbsp IA 46 Super Ranquel at San Justo airfield Buenos Aires April 1975 nbsp I A 50 Guarani II nbsp I A 58 Pucara nbsp I A 63 Pampa II The FMA has produced innovative aircraft prototypes but the state of the Argentine economy has usually prevented most of them from entering large scale production Nevertheless the FMA has managed to put several aircraft types of more conventional designs into full productions It also engaged in production of licensed aircraft from other countries The prefixes used for the aircraft locally developed and produced are Ae for Direccion General de Aerotecnica on the first period 1927 1936 F M A for Fabrica Militar de Aviones on the second period 1938 1943 I Ae for Instituto Aerotecnico on the third period 1943 1952 IA for Instituto Aerotecnico on the fourth current period 1952 to present List of aircraft manufactured projected or upgraded edit Year Model Built Obs Started as Instituto Aerotecnico 1928 Avro 504K Gosport 31 Biplane basic trainer license built First aircraft produced by FMA 1930 Dewoitine D 21 35 Monoplane fighter license built 1931 FMA AeC 1 1 Civil tourism aircraft prototype initial version basic trainer later version First local design 1932 FMA AeC 2 2 Civil tourism aircraft 1932 FMA AeME 1 7 Basic military trainer 1933 FMA AeT 1 3 Transport commercial aircraft 1934 FMA AeMO 1 41 Observation monoplane 1934 FMA AeMOe 1 6 Derivative of the AeMO 1 observation and training aircraft 1934 FMA AeMOe 2 61 Variant of the AeMOe 1 observation and training aircraft 1934 FMA AeC 3 16 Civil aircraft 1935 FMA AeMB 1 1 First bomber built by FMA 1935 FMA AeMB 2 14 Bomber 1935 FMA AeMS 1 1 Ambulance aircraft 1936 FMA AeC 3G 1 Tourism aircraft 1936 FMA AeC 4 1 Improved prototype version of the C 3G Name changed to Fabrica Militar de Aviones 1940 Curtiss Hawk 75O 20 License built version of the US monoplane fighter Curtiss Hawk 75 6 1940 Focke Wulf Fw 44J Stieglitz 190 License built version of the German biplane trainer 1940 FMA I Ae 20 El Boyero 130 Tourism aircraft series built by Industrias Petrolini 1943 FMA I Ae 21 1 Advanced trainer aircraft prototype based on the North American NA 16 1P fuselage 1943 FMA I Ae 22 DL 206 Advanced trainer aircraft 1945 FMA I Ae 23 1 Basic trainer prototype based on the Focke Wulf Fw44J 1946 FMA I Ae 24 Calquin 100 Attack Light bomber 1945 FMA I Ae 25 Manque 1 Assault Transport glider 1947 FMA I Ae 27 Pulqui 1 Jet fighter prototype first of its kind built in Latin America 1947 FMA I Ae 28 Super Calquin 0 Merlin powered development of Calquin abandoned in favour of I Ae 30 Nancu 1948 FMA I Ae 30 Nancu 1 Fighter Attack prototype 1947 FMA I Ae 31 Colibri 3 Two seat Trainer aircraft 1949 FMA I Ae 32 Chingolo 1 Tourism Trainer aircraft 1950 FMA I Ae 33 Pulqui II 5 First swept wing jet fighter designed in Latin America 1949 FMA I Ae 34 Clen Antu 7 Flying wing sailplane designed by Reimar Horten also known as the Horten XVa and XVb 1953 FMA I Ae 35 Huanquero Constancia Pandora 36 Twin engine transport aircraft 1960 FMA I Ae 35 Guarani I 1 Approximate date transport derived from the I Ae 35 Huanquero 1951 FMA I Ae 36 Condor 0 Cancelled Kurt Tank civil passenger transport project 1954 FMA I Ae 37 1 Supersonic delta wing interceptor Unpowered glider prototype only 1960 FMA I Ae 38 Naranjero 1 Prototype flying wing cargo transport mid 1950s FMA I Ae 39 0 Cancelled transport project based on the I Ae 35 1956 FMA I Ae 40 0 Cancelled night fighter project 1953 FMA I Ae 41 Urubu 4 Flying wing glider designed by Reimar Horten also known as the Horten XVc 1953 FMA I Ae 43 Pulqui III 0 Cancelled swept wing supersonic jet fighter project 1953 FMA IAe 44 DL II 0 Cancelled advanced trainer project 1959 FMA I Ae 45 Querandi 2 Executive transport prototype Some sources give 1957 and 1 built 1957 FMA I Ae 46 Ranquel 217 2 seat utility aircraft Second series developed into Super Ranquel 1960 FMA I Ae 48 0 Cancelled supersonic delta wing all weather interceptor 1963 DINFIA IA 50 Guarani II 35 Transport derived from IA 35 Guarani I Beechcraft T 34 Mentor 75 Licence built trainer 1965 IA 53 Mamboreta 2 Agricultural aircraft 1960 Morane Saulnier MS 760 Paris 48 Licence built trainer 1967 FMA IA 58 Pucara 120 Counter insurgency light attack aircraft 1985 FMA IA 58C Pucara Charlie 1 Single seater with 30 mm 1 2 in DEFA cannon air to surface missiles Cancelled after prototype flown 1972 FMA IA 59 1 UAV prototype 1975 FMA IA 60 0 Cancelled advanced trainer light attack project 7 1978 FMA IA 62 0 Cancelled military trainer project 1984 FMA IA 63 Pampa 32 Advanced trainer AT 63 currently when under production 1980 FMA IA 66 Pucara II 1 Single prototype converted IA 58A powered by two 1 000 ehp 746 kW Garrett TPE331 11 601W turboprop engines mid 1980s IA 67 Cordoba 0 Cancelled light transport project 8 mid 1980s IA 68 ATL 0 Cancelled light transport project citation needed mid 1980s FMA SAIA 90 0 Cancelled Supersonic air superiority jet fighter project 1990 FMA IA 70Embraer FMA CBA 123 Vector 2 Cancelled 19 passenger turboprop airliner 9 Name changed to Lockheed Martin Aircraft Argentina SA 1999 Lockheed Martin A 4AR Fightinghawk 18 Another 18 by Lockheed Martin in Pasadena California US 2003 Beechcraft T 34 Mentor Refurbishment of Argentine and Bolivia Air Forces 2006 Lockheed C 130 Hercules Refurbishment of Argentine Air Force and Colombian Air Force aircraft Name changed to FAdeA S A 2009 FMA IA 63 Pampa II 40 Changing power plant 2010 FMA IA 58 Pucara 1 Changing power plant and avionics cancelled 2010 FAdeA IA 73 Basic trainer to replace the T 34 cancelled 2014 FAdeA IA 100 1 Elemental trainer and a project to demonstrate the capabilities of the Argentine industry 2018 IA 63 Pampa III Block I 6 Third evolution of the Pampa aircraft with 3 more in order for 2019 for the Argentine Air Force Gallery editLocal designs edit nbsp Prototype AeC 1 1931 nbsp AeC 2 1932 nbsp AeT 1 1933 nbsp AeMOe 1 nbsp AeMS 1 prototype nbsp FMA 20 El Boyero 1940 nbsp Prototype FMA 21 trainer 1943 nbsp I Ae 22 DL advanced trainer 1944 nbsp I Ae 23 trainer prototype based on the FW 44J Stieglitz 1944 nbsp I Ae 24 Calquin attack aircraft c 1950 nbsp Prototype I Ae 25 Manque glider 1945 nbsp I Ae 30 Nancu 1948 nbsp IAe 31 Colibri 1947 nbsp I Ae 32 Chingolo 1949 nbsp I Ae 33 Pulqui II prototype 5 1959 preserved Tecnopolis show 2012 nbsp I Ae 34 Clen Antu tailless glider designed by Reimar Horten late 1940s nbsp Model I A 36 Condor airliner designed by Kurt Tank early 1950s nbsp FMA I Ae 37 fighter prototype 1953 nbsp IAe 41 Urubu flying wing glider 1953 nbsp IA 45 Querandi light transport prototype 1957 nbsp IA 50 Guarani I 1962 nbsp Prototype Guarani II 1965 Paris Air Salon nbsp IA 53 Mamboreta agricultural aircraft prototype mid 1960s nbsp IA 59 prototype Unmanned aerial vehicle early 1970s nbsp FMA IA 63 Pampa Paris Air Show 1991 nbsp CBA 123 IA 70 prototype Farnborough 1990 nbsp FAdeA I A 73 Unasur I mock up nbsp FAdeA I A 100 August 2016 Manufactured under license edit nbsp Dewotine D 21 nbsp Curtiss Hawk 75O nbsp FW 44J Stieglitz nbsp Morane Saulnier MS 760 Paris Mendoza 2005 Engines edit nbsp I Ae R 16 El Gaucho nbsp I Ae R 19 El IndioSee also editOther aircraft manufacturers in Argentina Aero Boero Chincul Cicare Helicopteros LAVIASAReferences editNotes edit a b c Historia on FADEA website FAdeA AUTORIDADES Archived from the original on 20 December 2014 Retrieved 11 July 2014 Back at the hands of the state in Spanish Ministerio de Defensa Republica Argentina Archived 2012 10 07 at the Wayback Machine Lockheed Martin Aircraft Argentina SA to Fabrica Argentina de Aviones Brigadier San Martin S A Padin 1999 pp 9 15 in Spanish FMA IA 60 Anteproyecto de Avion de Entrenamiento y Ataque website Zona Militar accessed 2015 06 08 Aeroespacio magazine Nr 566 Jul Ago 2005 Ficha Tecnica Nr 53 CBA123 IA 70 Archived 2010 09 12 at the Wayback Machine Bibliography edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2014 Bellomo Sergio Cordon Aguirre Arturo Marino Atilio Nunez Padin Jorge 1999 Nunez Padin Jorge Felix ed Curtiss Hawk Serie Fuerza Aerea Argentina in Spanish Vol 5 Bahia Blanca Argentina Fuerzas Aeronavales Arreguez Angel Cesar 2008 Mansur Sergio Luis ed Fabrica Militar de Aviones Cronicas y Testimonios in Spanish Second ed Cordoba Argentina Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnologia de la Provincia de Cordoba ISBN 978 987 24620 0 0 Further reading edit in Spanish FABRICA MILITAR DE AVIONES CRoNICAS Y TESTIMONIOS retrieved 2010 01 18 PDF file available for download Published in 2007 by Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnologia de la Provincia de Cordoba Argentina Cordoba s Province Science and Technology Ministry in Spanish La Argentina fabricante de Aviones retrieved 2016 04 23 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fabrica Argentina de Aviones Official website nbsp Argentina s FAdeA Mulls Major Changes Jane s IHS FMA history Aeromilitaria com ar in Spanish Former Lockheed Martin Argentina plant relaunched as FAdeA FlightGlobal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fabrica Argentina de Aviones amp oldid 1218227371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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