Amiot 143

{{Short description|French Medium Bomber}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2019}}

{{Infobox aircraft|name = Amiot 140 family

|image =Amiot 143 1.jpg

|type = Medium bomber

|manufacturer = Avions Amiot

|designer = Félix Amiot

|first_flight = 12 April 1931

|introduction = July 1935

|retired = 1944

|primary_user = French Air Force

|produced = 1935-1937

|number_built = 138

|variants =

}}

The Amiot 143 (sometimes written as 143M or 143 M.5) was a 1930s French 5-seat Multiplace de Combat (M.5) designed to meet 1928 specifications for a monoplane capable of day and night bombing, long-range reconnaissance and bomber escort.

Design and development

Amiot received an order for two prototype Amiot 140s, to be evaluated against the competing Bleriot 137, Breguet 410 and SPCA 30.Air International December 1988, p. 306. The Amiot 140 was a high-winged cantilever monoplane of all-metal construction, with a fixed tail wheel undercarriage. The pilot sat in an open cockpit, with positions for gunners in the nose and dorsal positions. A glazed gondola under the forward fuselage carried a bombardier/gunner, ensuring that the gunners had a clear field of fire all around the aircraft.Flight 12 December 1930, pp. 1434–1436. The Amiot was intended to be powered by two {{cvt|515|kW}} Lorraine 18G Orion water-cooled W engines but these were unavailable and the first prototype was fitted with Hispano-Suiza 12Nbr engines to allow flight testing, making its maiden flight on 12 April 1931.Air International December 1988, pp. 306–307. The second prototype was completed in February 1932 but the continued unavailability of its intended engines, either the original Lorraine-Dietrichs or turbocharged Hispano-Suizas, meant that it never flew. Despite this, on 23 November 1933 an order was placed for 40 Amiot 140s, to be powered by {{cvt|662|kW}} Lorraine 12Q Eider engines.

The French Air Ministry had meanwhile revised its requirements, concentrating on the bombing role and asking for better performance. Amiot redesigned the aircraft to meet these requirements and incorporate lessons learned during testing of the Amiot 140. The gondola under the fuselage was enlarged, allowing easier operation of the aircraft's guns and a radio-operator was added, bringing the crew to five. Manually operated gun turrets were provided in the nose and dorsal positions. Orders were placed for two prototypes, differing only in the engines fitted, with the Amiot 142 having Hispano-Suiza 12Y engines and the Amiot 143 having Gnome-Rhone 14K radial engines. The 143 flew first, on 1 August 1934, while the 142 didn't fly until January 1935.Air International December 1988, pp. 307–308. As it was decided to allocate the Hispano-Suiza engines to fighters, the Amiot 143 was selected,Breffort and Jouneau 2004, p. 12. and the existing order for 40 Amiot 140s was converted to 143s.Air International December 1988, p. 308.

The Amiot 143 had the same high-wing and fixed undercarriage as the Amiot 140, with the wing thick enough to allow crew access to the engines by a tunnel between the wing spars. The pilot sat in an enclosed cockpit, level with the leading edge of the wing and the navigator-bombardier, who was also provided with flying controls, sat in the extensively glazed gondola beneath the pilot. The radio operator sat towards the rear of the gondola and in early aircraft operated two {{cvt|7.7|mm|3}} Lewis guns. Nose and dorsal turrets, each carrying a Lewis gun, completed the defensive armament, while the gondola also housed an internal bomb-bay. After 40 aircraft had been completed, the design was revised, with the aircraft being fitted with a longer nose (increasing overall length from {{cvt|17.94|to|18.24|m}}, a revised fuel system and with the Lewis guns in the nose, dorsal turrets and ventral position each being replaced by single {{cvt|7.5|mm|3}} MAC 1934 machine guns, with a fourth gun for the navigator-bombardier firing through a hatch in the floor.Air International December 1988, pp. 309–310.Green 1967, pp. 78–79.

Deliveries of the design began in April 1935 and continued until March 1937, with a total of 138 being built.Green 1967, p. 79. An improved version, the Amiot 144 was built to meet 1933 requirement for a Multiplace de Combat, fitted with a retractable undercarriage. First flying on 18 January 1936, only one was built.Green 1967, p. 80.

Operational history

The Amiot 143 entered service in July 1935, with deliveries continuing until 1938. Six were going to be delivered to the Spanish Republican Air Force during the Spanish Civil War.Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War; New revised edition (2011) however there is no evidence that these were delivered during the war. By the time the last deliveries were made in March 1938, the Amiot was obsolete and was already being replaced by more modern aircraft such as the Bloch MB.131.Air International December 1988, pp. 311–312. At the outbreak of the Second World War, Amiot 143s still equipped 5 metropolitan groupes together with an African-based groupe.Air International December 1988, p. 312.

During the Phoney War, Amiot 143 groupes carried out reconnaissance and leaflet raids over Germany. 87 Amiot 143 remained in front line service on 10 May 1940, of which 50 equipped four metropolitan groupes: GBs I/34 and II/34 in the north, GBs I/38 and II/38 in the East and 17 equipped one African groupe, GB II/63, which was in the process of re-equipping with Martin 167Fs.Bénichou Le Fana de l'Aviation July 1997, p. 46. Following the start of the Battle of France, the Amiot 143 was mainly used in night attacks against German airfields and lines of communications, and experienced relatively low losses.Green 1967, p. 82.Air International December 1988, p. 313. An exception was a daylight raid by 10 Amiots from GBs I/34, II/34 and II/38 against German bridgeheads near Sedan on 14 May 1940. Despite having a fighter escort, two Amiots were shot down while a third force-landed before returning to base.Robineau, Lucien. [http://commandantdelaubier.info/circonstances/Circonstances%20par%20Gal%20Robineau.pdf "L’AVIATION DE BOMBARDEMENT FRANÇAISE EN MAI 1940"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111009121703/http://commandantdelaubier.info/circonstances/Circonstances%20par%20Gal%20Robineau.pdf |date=9 October 2011 }}. p.5. En souvenir du commandant de Laubier. January 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2011.

52 Amiot 143s were in the Unoccupied Zone and 25 were in French North Africa.Bénichou Le Fana de l'Aviation July 1997, p. 52. They were reorganized into GBs I/38 and II/38 and were used until July 1941 when they were replaced by LeO 451 bombers. Some Amiots of II/38 served as transports for the French in Syria. This groupe later joined the Allies after their landings in Africa. The last Amiot 143 was retired from service in February 1944. A few Amiot 143 are reported to have been commandeered by the Germans and used as transports. Only 11 were left in the Unoccupied Zone when it was occupied by the Germans in 1943 and only three were airworthy. Had the war gone on a little longer for France, it is likely that all of the Amiot 143 would have become trainers, having been replaced by more modern bombers such as the LeO 451.

Variants

File:Amiot 140M Annuaire de L'Aéronautique 1931.jpg

File:Amiot 150 photo L'Aerophile July 1937.jpg

;Amiot 140 M.4

:Prototype with 2 x {{cvt|485|kW}} Hispano-Suiza 12Nbr V-12 engines. Two built,"The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft", 220 of which only one flown, followed by orders for 40, to be powered by 2 x {{cvt|662|kW}} Lorraine 12Q Eider W-12 engines, which were built as Amiot 143s.Parmentier, B. [http://www.aviafrance.com/aviafrance1.php?ID=1162&ID_CONSTRUCTEUR=92&ANNEE=0&ID_MISSION=0&MOTCLEF= "Amiot 140M – Bombardier lourd "]. Aviafrance, 9 October 2003. Retrieved 3 October 2010. Optional M.5 suffix refers to bomber role, and seating for 4 crew.

;Amiot 141:Powered by three {{cvt|700|hp|order=flip}} Lorraine-Dietrich 18G Orion W-18 water-cooled piston engines.{{cite journal|journal=Revue de la Société Générale Aéronautique |title=Avions S.E.C.M. 140 et 141M |date=December 1932 |pages=108–109 |url=http://dev.museesafran.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/1350046441-autres-revues-(sga)-saf2012_0047441.pdf |accessdate=8 April 2015 |publisher=SGA |location=Argenteuil |language=French |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150927213728/http://dev.museesafran.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/1350046441-autres-revues-%28sga%29-saf2012_0047441.pdf |archivedate=27 September 2015 }}

;Amiot 142

:prototype with {{cvt|499|kW}} Hispano-Suiza 12Ybrs V-12 engines (1 built)

;Amiot 143 M.5

:production version with {{cvt|649|kW}} Gnome-Rhône 14Kirs/14Kjrs (left and right hand rotation) radial engines (138 built, including 40 ordered as Amiot 140 and 25 ordered as Amiot 144)

;Amiot 144

:version with reduced wing area, flaps and retractable undercarriage and no front turret, powered by 2x {{cvt|664|kW}} Gnome-Rhône 14Kirs/14Kjrs (left and right hand rotation) (1 built, orders for 25 produced as Amiot 143 instead)

;Amiot 145

:Amiot 144 with Hispano-Suiza 14AA radial engines (not built)

;Amiot 146

:Amiot 144 with Gnome-Rhône 18Lars radial engines (not built)

;Amiot 147

:Amiot 144 with Hispano-Suiza 12Ydrs/12Yfrs (left and right hand rotation) V-12 engines (not built)

;Amiot 150

:Reconnaissance, torpedo bomber, for Aeronavale. developed from Amiot 143 with a 10% larger wing, interchangeable wheel or float landing gear, and powered by two {{cvt|750|hp|kW}} Gnome-Rhône 14Kdrs radials (1 prototype built)

Operators

;{{flag|Independent State of Croatia}}

;{{Flagcountry|French Third Republic}}

;{{Flag|Vichy France}}

;{{flag|Nazi Germany}}

  • Luftwaffe operated a few captured aircraft.

;{{Flagcountry|Polish government-in-exile}}

  • Polish Air Forces on exile in France
  • Groupe de Bombardement Marche Polonais in Lyon-Bron had assigned 3 aircraft in late May until 1 June, others were used for training in other units.{{cite book|first=Bartłomiej |last=Belcarz|title=Polskie lotnictwo we Francji 1940|publisher=Stratus|date= 2001|pages=249–253|language=pl|isbn=83-916327-6-8}}

Specifications (Amiot 143)

File:Amiot 143 3-view L'Aerophile October 1934.jpg

{{Aircraft specs

|ref=Air International December 1989, p. 311.

|prime units?=met

|crew=Five (pilot, navigator/bombardier, radio operator, nose and dorsal gunners)

|length m=18.24

|span m=24.53

|height m=5.68

|wing area sqm=100

|airfoil=

|empty weight kg=5,455

|gross weight kg=8,611

|max takeoff weight kg=10,360

|fuel capacity=

|eng1 number=2|eng1 name=Gnome-Rhône 14Kirs/Kjrs|eng1 type=14-cyl. air-cooled radial engines|eng1 hp=858

|prop blade number=|prop name=|prop dia m=|prop dia note=

|max speed kmh=295

|range km=1300

|ferry range km=1,995

|ceiling m=7,500

|climb rate ms=

|climb rate note=

|time to altitude={{cvt|2000|m|ft}} in 6.8 minutes

|wing loading kg/m2=

|fuel consumption kg/km=

|guns=4 × {{cvt|7.5|mm|3}} MAC 1934 machine guns (one each in nose and dorsal turrets, forward gondola and rear gondola)

|bombs= {{cvt|800|kg}} internally plus {{cvt|800|kg}} externally

}}

See also

References

{{Commons category|Amiot 143}}

=Citations=

{{Reflist}}

=Bibliography=

  • {{cite magazine |last=Bénichou |first=Michel |date=May 1997 |title=Les Amiot 140: Le progrès était plus rapide |magazine=Le Fana de l'Aviation |issue=330 |pages=16–32 |language=French }}
  • {{cite magazine|last=Bénichou |first=Michel |date=July 1997 |title=Amiot 143: Les sacrificés de la première heure (Troisième partie) |magazine=Le Fana de l'Aviation |issue=332 |pages=40–54 |url=http://commandantdelaubier.info/SACRIFIES.PDF |language=French |access-date=18 May 2023 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Breffort |first=Dominique |author2=André Jouineau| title=French Aircraft from 1939 to 1942: Fighters, Bombers, Reconnaissance and Observation Types: Volume 1 From Amiot to Curtiss|year=2004|publisher=Histoire & Collections|location=Paris|isbn=2-915239-23-1}}
  • {{cite magazine |last1=Comas|first1=Matthieu|title=Les bombardiers polonais de Lyon-Bron |magazine=Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et son histoire |date=September 2000|issue=90 |pages=30–32 |trans-title=The Polish Bombers of Lyon-Bron|language=fr |issn=1243-8650}}
  • {{cite magazine |last=de Laubier |first=Philippe |date=October 1985 |title=Le Bombardement Français Sur La Meuse: Le 14 mai 1940 |magazine=Revue Historique des Armées |pages=96–109 |url=http://commandantdelaubier.info/circonstances/article-RHA.PDF |language=French |access-date=2 October 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721192901/http://commandantdelaubier.info/circonstances/article-RHA.PDF |archive-date=21 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Fernandez|first1=José|title=L'Amiot 143 (1ère partie) |journal=Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire |date=September 1994 |issue=19 |pages=2–7 |trans-title=The Amiot 143, Part 1 |language=fr |issn=1243-8650}}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Fernandez |first1=José |title=L'Amiot 143 (5e partie) |journal=Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire |date=January 1995 |issue=23 |pages=32–34 |trans-title=The Amiot 143, part 5 |language=French |issn=1243-8650}}
  • {{cite book |last=Green |first=William|title=War Planes of the Second World War: Volume Seven Bombers and Reconnaissance Aircraft|year=1967 |publisher=Macdonald |location=London }}
  • {{cite magazine|last1=Moulin|first1=Jacques|title=Les Amiot 143 à la 35ème |magazine=Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire |date=April 1999 |issue=73 |pages=42–44 |trans-title=The Amiot 143s of the 35th Wing|language=French |issn=1243-8650}}
  • {{cite magazine |title=The Amiot 143...a Study in Angular Ugliness |magazine=Air International|date=December 1988|volume=35 |issue=6 |pages=306–313 |issn=0306-5634}}
  • {{cite magazine |title=The Paris Air Show: The French Aircraft Exhibits |magazine=Flight|date=12 December 1930 |volume=XXII |issue= 50 |pages=1427–1438 |url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1930/untitled0%20-%201505.html }}

{{Amiot aircraft}}

Category:1930s French bomber aircraft

143

Category:High-wing aircraft

Category:Aircraft first flown in 1931

Category:Twin piston-engined tractor aircraft

Category:Aircraft with fixed conventional landing gear