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Voisin (aircraft)

Aéroplanes Voisin was a French aircraft manufacturing company established in 1905 by Gabriel Voisin and his brother Charles, and was continued by Gabriel after Charles died in an automobile accident in 1912; the full official company name then became Société Anonyme des Aéroplanes G. Voisin[1][2][note 1] (English: Aeroplanes Voisin public limited company). During World War I, it was a major producer of military aircraft, notably the Voisin III. After the war Gabriel Voisin abandoned the aviation industry, and set up a company to design and produce luxury automobiles, called Avions Voisin.

Société Anonyme des Aéroplanes G. Voisin
IndustryAerospace
Founded1905
Fatedissolved
SuccessorAvions Voisin
HeadquartersBillancourt, Paris, France
Key people
Gabriel Voisin
Maurice Colieux
ProductsAircraft
Voisin-Farman 1 completing the first closed-circuit kilometer flight in Europe.

Early history edit

 
Raymonde de Laroche, first woman to earn a pilot's licence, with Voisin
 
Harry Houdini in Voisin-Farman

Gabriel Voisin had been employed by Ernest Archdeacon to work on the construction of gliders and then entered into partnership with Louis Blériot, to form the company Ateliers d' Aviation Edouard Surcouf, Blériot et Voisin in 1905.[3] Following a disagreement, Gabriel Voisin bought out Blériot and on 5 November 1906 established the Appareils d'Aviation Les Frères Voisin with his brother Charles [3] (English: Flying Machines of Voisin Brothers). The company, based in the Parisian suburb of Billancourt, was the first commercial aircraft factory in the world.[4] It created Europe's first manned, heavier-than-air powered aircraft capable of a sustained (1 km), circular, controlled flight, including take-off and landing, the Voisin-Farman I. Having learned to fly with a Voisin, on 8 March 1910,[5] Raymonde de Laroche became the first woman to receive a pilot licence when the Aéro-Club de France issued her licence #36. In South Africa, on 28 December 1909, French aviator Albert Kimmerling made the first manned, heavier-than-air powered flight in Africa in a Voisin 1907 biplane.[6]

Like many early aircraft companies, Voisin built machines to the designs of their customers which helped support their own experiments. The company's first customers were a M. Florencie,[7] who commissioned them to build an ornithopter he had designed, and Henri Kapferer, for whom they built a pusher biplane of their own design. The latter was underpowered, having a Buchet engine of only 20 hp (15 kW), and it failed to fly. However, Kapferer introduced them to Leon Delagrange, for whom they built a similar machine, powered by a 50 hp (37 kW) Antoinette engine. This was first successfully flown by Charles Voisin on 30 March 1907, achieving a straight-line flight of 60 m (200 ft).[8] In turn Delagrange introduced them to Henri Farman, who ordered an identical aircraft. These two aircraft are often referred to by their owners' names as the Voisin-Delagrange No.1[note 2] and the Voisin-Farman No.1,[note 3] and were the foundation of the company's success. On 13 January 1908 Farman used his aircraft to win the "Grand Prix de l'aviation" offered by Ernest Archdeacon and Henry Deutsch de la Meurthe for the first closed-circuit flight of over a kilometer. Since the Wright Brothers would provide no evidence of their own accomplishments, they were widely disbelieved at the time, so this was a major breakthrough in the conquest of the air, and brought Voisin many orders for similar aircraft. Around sixty would be built.

Major Designs of 1907-1914 edit

 
1910 experimental two-seater biplane with mitrailleuse fired by the passenger
 
Voisin Canard floatplane on the Seine in 1911. The nose is to the right.
Only one built.
Tail first pusher design initially flown as a landplane but later fitted with floats. Examples were sold to the French and Russia Navies.
  • 1911 Type Tourism
  • 1912 Type Monaco
Smaller version of the Canard floatplane. Two were built to take part in the 1912 Monaco Aero Meeting.
Flying boat built for Henry Deutsch de la Meurthe with a six-wheeled boat hull suspended below the wings.
A pod and boom pusher biplane developed for the French Army's 1912 trials. It performed successfully, and some seventy were built in France, and a small number in Russia
  • 1913 Voisin Canon
Six wheeled triple tailed pod and boom pusher armed with a 37mm Hotchkiss cannon
Development of the L with detail improvements but of the same general configuration.

Voisin designs in World War I edit

 
Voisin III
 
Cannon armed Voisin IV
 
Voisin VIII in June, 1917
 
1918 Voisin XII

Production of the Voisin III Type LA and LAS increased with the outbreak of the First World War, with examples being built under licence in Italy by S.I.T., in Russia by Anatra, Breshnev-Moller, Dux Lebedev and Schetinin, and in the UK by Savages of King's Lynn,[10] with production exceeding 1,350 airframes. Examples would also be used by the Belgian and Romanian Air Services, and a few even survived the war to be used in the Ukraine, and in Russia.[11] Soon after the outbreak of the First World War, it became apparent that the French aviation industry could not produce aircraft in sufficient numbers to meet military requirements. Manufacturers from various other fields became aviation subcontractors, and later license-builders as did many smaller aircraft manufacturers who had been unable to secure orders for their own designs. By 1918, Voisin was involved with the Voisin-Lafresnaye company, a major constructor of airframes, and the Voisin-Lefebvre company, a major builder of aircraft engines.

The Voisin III was followed by a small number of the 37mm cannon armed Voisin IV Type LB and Type LBS.[12] The B in the factory designations indicate that the airframe was equipped with a cannon, although some had it removed in service.[13] The S indicates that the engine was raised (surélevé) compared to the original installation.[14]

Three hundred of the improved Voisin V Type LAS aircraft followed.[15]

The Voisin VI Type LAS was a development of the V fitted with a 155 hp (116 kW) Salmson radial, of which only around 50 were built despite the improved performance as the basic type was considered to be obsolete.[16]

The larger Type LC, Voisin VII, followed in 1916 with the engine cooling radiators moved to the nose, but was not a success as it was badly underpowered and only a hundred of these were built.[17]

Voisin built a large Triplane powered by four 150 hp (110 kW) Salmson water-cooled aero-engines in 1915 with twin superimposed fuselage booms, however it attracted no orders, but its wings were reused in 1916 for the E.28 triplane bomber which was now powered by four 220 hp (160 kW) V8 Hispano-Suiza 8B engines, which likewise failed to secure any orders.[18]

Also in 1915, Voisin built the Type M in which the fuselage was below the lower wing, and the engine filled the gap between the wings, however neither it, nor the otherwise similar twin fuselage Type O were successful.[19]

Following the Voisin VII came the more powerful, and more successful Voisin VIII Type LAP and Type LBP. This was the French army's main night bomber in 1916 and 1917, with over one thousand built.[20]

The Voisin IX, or Type LC (the designation was reused), was an unsuccessful lightened development of the VIII for a reconnaissance aeroplane, which lost out to the Salmson 2 and Breguet 14.[21]

The Voisin X, Type LAR and Type LBR, was the Voisin VIII with a more reliable, lighter and more powerful 280 hp (210 kW) Renault 12Fe engine in place of the 220 hp (160 kW) Peugeot 8Aa used on the VIII. Deliveries were severely delayed, but some nine hundred were built before the end of the war. In 1918, a Voisin X (No. 3500) was used to create the Voisin 'Aerochir' ('Ambulance'). The aircraft was capable of flying a surgeon, together with an operating table and support equipment, including an x-ray machine and autoclave, into the battlefield. Under-wing panniers could be carry 800 lb (360 kg) of equipment.[22] Another X was converted into a drone, and flown in 1918 and again in 1923.

The Voisin XI was a development of the X powered by a 350 hp (260 kW) Panhard 12Bc, with a slightly longer wingspan and assorted detail changes. Only about 10 were built and it did not see service.[23]

The final Voisin design, the Voisin XII, was successful in trials in 1918 for the BN2 bomber competition, but with the end of the war, no production was ordered. The Voisin XII was a large, four-engined biplane night bomber.[24] Several projects for heavy bombers for the next bomber specification (BN3/4) may have been based on the XII, but fitted with larger Salmson or Hispano-Suiza engines, but were not built.[25]

In the 1930s, a glider was built by a Louis Voisin, however he had no connection to Gabriel Voisin.

Post World War I edit

After 1918, Gabriel Voisin abandoned the aviation industry in favor of automobile construction under the name Avions Voisin.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gunston, 1993, says the full name was "Aéroplanes G. Voisin". On the other hand the avions-voisin.org webpage specifies the name as "Société Aéroplanes Voisin, Société Anonyme".
  2. ^ marked on the side-curtains of the tail unit as Léon Delagrange No. 1
  3. ^ marked on the side-curtains of the tail unit as Henri Farman No. 1

References edit

  1. ^ Baldwin, Nick (1987). The World guide to automobile manufacturers. New York, N.Y.: Facts on File Publications. p. 508. ISBN 0-8160-1844-8.
  2. ^ http://www.avions-voisin.org/public/rubrique.php3?id_rubrique=12 [dead link]
  3. ^ a b Gunston, Bill (1993). World encyclopaedia of aircraft manufacturers: from the pioneers to the present day. Naval Institute Press. p. 318. ISBN 1-55750-939-5.
  4. ^ Davilla p. 541
  5. ^ Eileen F. Lebow (7 April 2003). Before Amelia: Women Pilots in the Early Days of Aviation. Brassey's. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-57488-532-3. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-08-20. Retrieved 2015-06-18. 1910 to 1920 - Early Flying in South Africa
  7. ^ Opdycke 1999 p.263
  8. ^ Nouveaux Essais de l'Aéroplane Delagrangel'Aérophile , April 1907, p.105
  9. ^ The New Voisin Biplane. Flight, 11 December 1909 p. 799
  10. ^ Davilla pp.547-549
  11. ^ Davilla pp.547-550
  12. ^ Davilla pp.550-551
  13. ^ Davilla p.559
  14. ^ Davilla p.544
  15. ^ Davilla p.552
  16. ^ Davilla p.556
  17. ^ Davilla p.557
  18. ^ Davilla pp.552 & 557-558
  19. ^ Davilla p.570
  20. ^ Davilla pp.559-561
  21. ^ Davilla p.562
  22. ^ Stamford, Lincs., U.K.: FlyPast, Key Publishing Ltd, Flying Hospital, April 2007 No. 309 p. 14
  23. ^ Davilla p.566
  24. ^ Davilla pp.567-568
  25. ^ Davilla p.569

Bibliography edit

  • (in French) Carlier, Claude, Sera Maître du Monde, qui sera Maître de l'Air: La Création de l'Aviation militaire française. Paris: Economica/ISC, 2004. ISBN 2-7178-4918-1
  • Davilla, James J., & Soltan, Arthur M., French Aircraft of the First World War. Stratford, Connecticut: Flying Machines Press, 1997. ISBN 0-9637110-4-0
  • (in French) Lacaze, Henri, Les Aéroplanes Voisin, Collection Histoire de L'Aviation N°39. Paris:LELA PRESSE, 2018.
  • Opdycke, Leonard E. French Aeroplanes Before the Great War Atglen, PA: Schiffer, 1999 ISBN 0-7643-0752-5
  • Voisin, Gabriel, Mes 10,000 Cerfs-volants, Editions La Table Ronde, Paris, 1960.
  • ( Italy ) Grassani, Enrico "Elisa Deroche alias Raymonde de Laroche. La presenza femminile negli anni pionieristici dell'aviazione" Editoriale Delfino, Milano 2015. ISBN 978-88-97323-46-4

voisin, aircraft, other, uses, voisin, aéroplanes, voisin, french, aircraft, manufacturing, company, established, 1905, gabriel, voisin, brother, charles, continued, gabriel, after, charles, died, automobile, accident, 1912, full, official, company, name, then. For other uses see Voisin Aeroplanes Voisin was a French aircraft manufacturing company established in 1905 by Gabriel Voisin and his brother Charles and was continued by Gabriel after Charles died in an automobile accident in 1912 the full official company name then became Societe Anonyme des Aeroplanes G Voisin 1 2 note 1 English Aeroplanes Voisin public limited company During World War I it was a major producer of military aircraft notably the Voisin III After the war Gabriel Voisin abandoned the aviation industry and set up a company to design and produce luxury automobiles called Avions Voisin Societe Anonyme des Aeroplanes G VoisinIndustryAerospaceFounded1905FatedissolvedSuccessorAvions VoisinHeadquartersBillancourt Paris FranceKey peopleGabriel VoisinMaurice ColieuxProductsAircraft Voisin Farman 1 completing the first closed circuit kilometer flight in Europe Contents 1 Early history 2 Major Designs of 1907 1914 3 Voisin designs in World War I 4 Post World War I 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 BibliographyEarly history edit nbsp Raymonde de Laroche first woman to earn a pilot s licence with Voisin nbsp Harry Houdini in Voisin Farman Gabriel Voisin had been employed by Ernest Archdeacon to work on the construction of gliders and then entered into partnership with Louis Bleriot to form the company Ateliers d Aviation Edouard Surcouf Bleriot et Voisin in 1905 3 Following a disagreement Gabriel Voisin bought out Bleriot and on 5 November 1906 established the Appareils d Aviation Les Freres Voisin with his brother Charles 3 English Flying Machines of Voisin Brothers The company based in the Parisian suburb of Billancourt was the first commercial aircraft factory in the world 4 It created Europe s first manned heavier than air powered aircraft capable of a sustained 1 km circular controlled flight including take off and landing the Voisin Farman I Having learned to fly with a Voisin on 8 March 1910 5 Raymonde de Laroche became the first woman to receive a pilot licence when the Aero Club de France issued her licence 36 In South Africa on 28 December 1909 French aviator Albert Kimmerling made the first manned heavier than air powered flight in Africa in a Voisin 1907 biplane 6 Like many early aircraft companies Voisin built machines to the designs of their customers which helped support their own experiments The company s first customers were a M Florencie 7 who commissioned them to build an ornithopter he had designed and Henri Kapferer for whom they built a pusher biplane of their own design The latter was underpowered having a Buchet engine of only 20 hp 15 kW and it failed to fly However Kapferer introduced them to Leon Delagrange for whom they built a similar machine powered by a 50 hp 37 kW Antoinette engine This was first successfully flown by Charles Voisin on 30 March 1907 achieving a straight line flight of 60 m 200 ft 8 In turn Delagrange introduced them to Henri Farman who ordered an identical aircraft These two aircraft are often referred to by their owners names as the Voisin Delagrange No 1 note 2 and the Voisin Farman No 1 note 3 and were the foundation of the company s success On 13 January 1908 Farman used his aircraft to win the Grand Prix de l aviation offered by Ernest Archdeacon and Henry Deutsch de la Meurthe for the first closed circuit flight of over a kilometer Since the Wright Brothers would provide no evidence of their own accomplishments they were widely disbelieved at the time so this was a major breakthrough in the conquest of the air and brought Voisin many orders for similar aircraft Around sixty would be built Major Designs of 1907 1914 edit nbsp 1910 experimental two seater biplane with mitrailleuse fired by the passenger nbsp Voisin Canard floatplane on the Seine in 1911 The nose is to the right 1907 Voisin 1907 biplane 1909 Voisin Tractor 9 Only one built dd 1910 Voisin Type de Course 1910 Voisin Type Militaire 1910 Type Bordeaux 1911 Voisin Canard Tail first pusher design initially flown as a landplane but later fitted with floats Examples were sold to the French and Russia Navies dd 1911 Type Tourism 1912 Type Monaco Smaller version of the Canard floatplane Two were built to take part in the 1912 Monaco Aero Meeting dd 1912 Voisin Icare Aero Yacht Flying boat built for Henry Deutsch de la Meurthe with a six wheeled boat hull suspended below the wings dd 1912 Voisin Type L or Voisin Type I amp II A pod and boom pusher biplane developed for the French Army s 1912 trials It performed successfully and some seventy were built in France and a small number in Russia dd 1913 Voisin Canon Six wheeled triple tailed pod and boom pusher armed with a 37mm Hotchkiss cannon dd 1914 Type LA or Voisin III Development of the L with detail improvements but of the same general configuration dd Voisin designs in World War I edit nbsp Voisin III nbsp Cannon armed Voisin IV nbsp Voisin VIII in June 1917 nbsp 1918 Voisin XII Production of the Voisin III Type LA and LAS increased with the outbreak of the First World War with examples being built under licence in Italy by S I T in Russia by Anatra Breshnev Moller Dux Lebedev and Schetinin and in the UK by Savages of King s Lynn 10 with production exceeding 1 350 airframes Examples would also be used by the Belgian and Romanian Air Services and a few even survived the war to be used in the Ukraine and in Russia 11 Soon after the outbreak of the First World War it became apparent that the French aviation industry could not produce aircraft in sufficient numbers to meet military requirements Manufacturers from various other fields became aviation subcontractors and later license builders as did many smaller aircraft manufacturers who had been unable to secure orders for their own designs By 1918 Voisin was involved with the Voisin Lafresnaye company a major constructor of airframes and the Voisin Lefebvre company a major builder of aircraft engines The Voisin III was followed by a small number of the 37mm cannon armed Voisin IV Type LB and Type LBS 12 The B in the factory designations indicate that the airframe was equipped with a cannon although some had it removed in service 13 The S indicates that the engine was raised sureleve compared to the original installation 14 Three hundred of the improved Voisin V Type LAS aircraft followed 15 The Voisin VI Type LAS was a development of the V fitted with a 155 hp 116 kW Salmson radial of which only around 50 were built despite the improved performance as the basic type was considered to be obsolete 16 The larger Type LC Voisin VII followed in 1916 with the engine cooling radiators moved to the nose but was not a success as it was badly underpowered and only a hundred of these were built 17 Voisin built a large Triplane powered by four 150 hp 110 kW Salmson water cooled aero engines in 1915 with twin superimposed fuselage booms however it attracted no orders but its wings were reused in 1916 for the E 28 triplane bomber which was now powered by four 220 hp 160 kW V8 Hispano Suiza 8B engines which likewise failed to secure any orders 18 Also in 1915 Voisin built the Type M in which the fuselage was below the lower wing and the engine filled the gap between the wings however neither it nor the otherwise similar twin fuselage Type O were successful 19 Following the Voisin VII came the more powerful and more successful Voisin VIII Type LAP and Type LBP This was the French army s main night bomber in 1916 and 1917 with over one thousand built 20 The Voisin IX or Type LC the designation was reused was an unsuccessful lightened development of the VIII for a reconnaissance aeroplane which lost out to the Salmson 2 and Breguet 14 21 The Voisin X Type LAR and Type LBR was the Voisin VIII with a more reliable lighter and more powerful 280 hp 210 kW Renault 12Fe engine in place of the 220 hp 160 kW Peugeot 8Aa used on the VIII Deliveries were severely delayed but some nine hundred were built before the end of the war In 1918 a Voisin X No 3500 was used to create the Voisin Aerochir Ambulance The aircraft was capable of flying a surgeon together with an operating table and support equipment including an x ray machine and autoclave into the battlefield Under wing panniers could be carry 800 lb 360 kg of equipment 22 Another X was converted into a drone and flown in 1918 and again in 1923 The Voisin XI was a development of the X powered by a 350 hp 260 kW Panhard 12Bc with a slightly longer wingspan and assorted detail changes Only about 10 were built and it did not see service 23 The final Voisin design the Voisin XII was successful in trials in 1918 for the BN2 bomber competition but with the end of the war no production was ordered The Voisin XII was a large four engined biplane night bomber 24 Several projects for heavy bombers for the next bomber specification BN3 4 may have been based on the XII but fitted with larger Salmson or Hispano Suiza engines but were not built 25 In the 1930s a glider was built by a Louis Voisin however he had no connection to Gabriel Voisin Post World War I editMain article Avions Voisin After 1918 Gabriel Voisin abandoned the aviation industry in favor of automobile construction under the name Avions Voisin Notes edit Gunston 1993 says the full name was Aeroplanes G Voisin On the other hand the avions voisin org webpage specifies the name as Societe Aeroplanes Voisin Societe Anonyme marked on the side curtains of the tail unit as Leon Delagrange No 1 marked on the side curtains of the tail unit as Henri Farman No 1References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Voisin aircraft Baldwin Nick 1987 The World guide to automobile manufacturers New York N Y Facts on File Publications p 508 ISBN 0 8160 1844 8 http www avions voisin org public rubrique php3 id rubrique 12 dead link a b Gunston Bill 1993 World encyclopaedia of aircraft manufacturers from the pioneers to the present day Naval Institute Press p 318 ISBN 1 55750 939 5 Davilla p 541 Eileen F Lebow 7 April 2003 Before Amelia Women Pilots in the Early Days of Aviation Brassey s p 14 ISBN 978 1 57488 532 3 Retrieved 7 March 2011 1910 to 1920 Early Flying in South Africa South African Power Flying Association Archived from the original on 2015 08 20 Retrieved 2015 06 18 1910 to 1920 Early Flying in South Africa Opdycke 1999 p 263 Nouveaux Essais de l Aeroplane Delagrangel Aerophile April 1907 p 105 The New Voisin Biplane Flight 11 December 1909 p 799 Davilla pp 547 549 Davilla pp 547 550 Davilla pp 550 551 Davilla p 559 Davilla p 544 Davilla p 552 Davilla p 556 Davilla p 557 Davilla pp 552 amp 557 558 Davilla p 570 Davilla pp 559 561 Davilla p 562 Stamford Lincs U K FlyPast Key Publishing Ltd Flying Hospital April 2007 No 309 p 14 Davilla p 566 Davilla pp 567 568 Davilla p 569 Bibliography edit in French Carlier Claude Sera Maitre du Monde qui sera Maitre de l Air La Creation de l Aviation militaire francaise Paris Economica ISC 2004 ISBN 2 7178 4918 1 Davilla James J amp Soltan Arthur M French Aircraft of the First World War Stratford Connecticut Flying Machines Press 1997 ISBN 0 9637110 4 0 in French Lacaze Henri Les Aeroplanes Voisin Collection Histoire de L Aviation N 39 Paris LELA PRESSE 2018 Opdycke Leonard E French Aeroplanes Before the Great War Atglen PA Schiffer 1999 ISBN 0 7643 0752 5 Voisin Gabriel Mes 10 000 Cerfs volants Editions La Table Ronde Paris 1960 Italy Grassani Enrico Elisa Deroche alias Raymonde de Laroche La presenza femminile negli anni pionieristici dell aviazione Editoriale Delfino Milano 2015 ISBN 978 88 97323 46 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Voisin aircraft amp oldid 1208641877, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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