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Mauboussin M.120

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The Mauboussin M.120 was a trainer and touring aircraft built in France in the 1930s and again in the years following World War II.

Design and production

It was based on a 1931 collaboration between Louis Peyret and Pierre Mauboussin, the Peyret-Mauboussin PM.XII, and like it, was a low-wing cantilever monoplane of wooden construction. The undercarriage was of fixed tailskid type, and the pilot and instructor sat in tandem, open cockpits. Mauboussin built a number of prototypes himself, followed by a small series manufactured for him by Breguet in 1934. The following year, Maryse Hilz set a women's altitude record of 7,388 metres on 24 September in the M.122.

In 1936, Fouga, then a builder of railway rolling stock, purchased all rights to the design as part of an effort to enter the aircraft industry, and was able to secure a contract from the Armée de l'Air to supply the type as the M.123.

Production was restarted by Fouga after the war for the French flying clubs.

One of first M.120s took part in the international touring aircraft contest Challenge 1932, flown by André Nicolle. It completed contest on the last 24th place, but it had the weakest engine of all participants and completing this contest was quite a success anyway.

Variants

  • M.120 - original design with Salmson 9 engine
    • M.120/32 - examples built by Mauboussin (3 built)
    • M.120/34 - examples built by Breguet (10 built)
  • M.121P Corsaire Major - version with Pobjoy R engine (4 built)
  • M.122 Corsaire Major - version with Salmson 9 engine for Maryse Hilz (1 built)
  • M.123 - major production version with Salmson 9 engine (65 built)
  • M.124 - first postwar version with Aster 4A engine (1 built)
  • M.125 - version with Régnier 4Jo engine (5 built)
  • M.126 - version with Salmson 5Ap engine (1 built)
  • M.127 - version with Régnier 4Eo engine (2 built)
  • M.128 - version with Mathis G4G engine (1 built)
  • M.129 aka M.129/48 - definitive postwar version with Minié 4Do engine (23 built)


Specifications (M.123)

Template:Aerospecs

References

External links

See also

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mauboussin M.120".