FBA Type A

{{short description|French WW1 reconnaissance aircraft}}

{{Infobox Aircraft Begin

|name=FBA Type A, B, and C

|image=Ministry of Information First World War Miscellaneous Collection Q33809 (cropped).jpg

}}{{Infobox Aircraft Type

|type=Reconnaissance flying boat

|manufacturer=FBA

|first flight=1912

|introduced=1912

|status=Retired

|primary user=France Aéronautique Maritime

|more users=Royal Naval Air Service

|number built=ca. 250

|developed into =FBA Type H

}}

The FBA Type A and the similar Type B and C were a family of reconnaissance flying boats produced in France prior to and during World War I.

Development

All three were unequal-span pusher biplane flying boats with a single step hull with ash longerons covered in laminated plywood, divided by bulkheads into eight compartments. The empennage was carried on an upswept curved extension of the hull made from steel tubing. The pilot and observer sat side by side in the open cockpit.Taylor, 1989, p.381

The design originated with patents by Donnet-Lévêque and initially reflected the general configuration of that company's aircraft.

The Type A had a single-bay wing, while the larger Type B and C had two bay wings which otherwise only differed in the engine installed, with the type B using a {{cvt|100|hp|disp=flip}} Gnome Monosoupape and the type C using a {{cvt|130|hp|disp=flip}} Clerget 9B. The RNAS contracted for 20 type B's from Norman Thompson, who was responsible for building flying surfaces for hulls provided from France, which differed most noticeably by having a rectangular all-flying rudder in place of the D-shaped rudder used on French examples. The Type A was the only version with a fin attached to the rudder although some aircraft had a field modification with a fin being added between the hull and the tailplane. The Type H was developed from the Type C but was larger, had a new hull that wasn't attached directly to the tailplane, had an oval rudder and used a Hispano-Suiza 8 stationary engine.

Operational history

image:RNAS FBA Type B Ministry of Information First World War Miscellaneous Collection Q33780.jpg

The earliest examples sold entered service with the Austro-Hungarian Navy and Danish Navy prior to World War I, but large-scale use began with sales to the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) who initially ordered 20 Type B's from Norman-Thompson before receiving additional Type Cs from France. The French Aéronautique Maritime, and Italian Navy followed with orders for Type Bs and Cs in 1915. The FBA flying boats were used for naval patrols and frequently encountered their opposing German and Austro-Hungarian Navy counterparts which led to some being converted to single seaters armed with a machine gun. Three Type Bs were the first aircraft operated by the Portuguese Navy.

Variants

;Type A: (1913) - powered by a {{cvt|50|hp|disp=flip}} Gnome Omega, initial aircraft from 1913.

;Type A: (production) - powered by a {{cvt|80|hp|disp=flip}} Gnome Monosoupape 7 Type A, enlarged production aircraft.

;Type B: powered by a {{cvt|100|hp|disp=flip}} Gnome Monosoupape 9 Type B-2. Over 150 built. The 20 Norman-Thompson built Type B for the RNAS had different flying surfaces.

;Type C: powered by a {{cvt|130|hp|disp=flip}} Clerget 9B. 78 built.

;Type 11 HE.2: two-seat elementary flying-boat.

;Type 14 HE.2: Two-seat training flying-boat for the French Navy. 20 built.

;FBA 100ch: French Navy nomenclature for the Type B

;FBA 130ch:French Navy nomenclature for the Type C

Operators

File:Aviation Officer's School First season 22.jpg

File:Lisboa em1018 2103651 (26330326018).jpg

;{{flag|Austria-Hungary}}

;{{BRA}}

;{{DNK}}

;{{FRA}}

;{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy}}

;{{POR}}

;{{flagcountry|Russian Empire|1914}}

;{{flagcountry|UKGBI}}

Survivor

A single example of a type B survives in the Museu de Marinha in Lisbon. This aircraft was reassembled from parts from the Portuguese Navy's first two aircraft.

Specifications (Type C)

File:Franco British Aviation (FBA) Type C drawing.jpg

{{Aircraft specs

|ref=French aircraft of the First World War,Davilla, 2002, 259 and The Rand McNally encyclopedia of military aircraft, 1914-1980Enzo, 1983, p.88

|prime units?=met

|crew=Two, pilot and observer

|length m=9.14

|span m=13.71

|height m=3.05

|wing area sqm=32

|airfoil=

|empty weight kg=640

|gross weight kg=907

|max takeoff weight kg=

|fuel capacity=

|eng1 number=1|eng1 name=Clerget 9B|eng1 type=9-cylinder air-cooled rotary piston engine|eng1 hp=130

|prop blade number=2|prop name=fixed-pitch pusher propeller

|prop dia m=

|prop dia note=

|max speed kmh=110

|cruise speed kmh=

|stall speed kmh=

|never exceed speed kmh=

|never exceed speed kts=

|range km=320

|endurance=2.75 hours

|ceiling m=

|time to altitude={{cvt|2000|m}} in 25 minutes

|wing loading kg/m2=

|guns= 1 x {{cvt|7.7|mm}} machine-gun

|bombs= 2 x {{cvt|11|kg}} bombs

}}

References

{{Commons category multi|FBA Type B|FBA Type C}}

=Citations=

{{Reflist|2}}

=Bibliography=

  • {{cite book |last1=Davilla |first1=Dr. James J. |last2=Soltan |first2=Arthur M. |title=French aircraft of the First World War |year=2002 |publisher=Flying Machines Press|isbn=1891268090|page=259}}
  • {{cite book|last1=Durkota|first1=Alan|last2=Darcey|first2=Thomas|last3=Kulikov |first3=Victor |title= The Imperial Russian Air Service — Famous Pilots and Aircraft of World War I|year=1995|publisher=Flying Machines Press|location=Mountain View, CA |isbn=0963711024}}
  • {{cite book|last=Enzo|first=Angelucci|title=The Rand McNally encyclopedia of military aircraft, 1914-1980|date=1983|publisher=Military Press|location=San Diego|isbn=0517410214|page=88}}
  • {{cite book|last1=Morareau|first1=Lucien|title=Les Aeronefs de l'Aviation Maritime|publisher=ARDHAN (Association pour la Recherche de Documentation sur l'Histoire de l'Aeronautique Navale|location=Paris, France|year=2002|isbn=2-913344-04-6|pages=44–47}}
  • {{cite book|last1=Taylor|first1=Michael J.H.|title=Jane's encyclopedia of aviation|date=1989|publisher=Portland House|location=London|isbn=0517691868| page=381}}
  • {{cite web|last1=Mulder|first1=Rob J M|title=THE BRITISH AIRCRAFT ON THE ELTA OF 1919|url=http://www.europeanairlines.no/the-british-aircraft-on-the-elta-of-1919/|website=European Airlines|publisher=EUROPEAN AIRLINES / ROB MULDER|accessdate=10 February 2017|date=2015}}
  • {{cite book|last1=Thetford |first1=Owen|title=British naval aircraft since 1912|date=1982|publisher=Putnam|isbn=0370300211|edition=5th|page=461}}
  • {{cite magazine|title=The Franco-British Aviation Co Ltd. |magazine=Flight |date=27 December 1913 |volume=V (No. 52) |issue=261 |page=1405 |url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1913/1913%20-%201379.html |accessdate=10 December 2018}}

{{FBA aircraft}}

Category:1910s international military reconnaissance aircraft

Category:1910s French military reconnaissance aircraft

Category:FBA aircraft

Category:Flying boats

Category:Single-engined pusher aircraft

Category:Biplanes

Category:1910s French patrol aircraft

Category:Aircraft first flown in 1912

Category:Rotary-engined aircraft