The Bréguet Bre.4, also known variously as the Type IV and BUM, was a French biplane bomber of World War I. A fighter version of it was also produced as the BUC and BLC; some of these saw service with the British Royal Navy, which called them 'the Bréguet de Chasse.
The Bre.4 was developed during 1914 when French military planners began to express a preference for pusher- over tractor-configured aircraft, leading Bréguet Aviation to cease further development of its original Type IV design and pursue military contracts with an aircraft of the preferred layout. The Type IV was a two-bay, equal-span, unstaggered biplane that seated the pilot and observer in tandem open cockpits in a nacelle that also carried the pusher engine at its rear, and the tricycle undercarriage.[1]
As the prototype neared completion, the Bréguet factory at La Brayelle, Douai was threatened by the advancing German Army, and the machine and its builders were evacuated to Villacoublay where construction and testing were completed. At this point, André and Édouard Michelin approached the French government with an offer to sponsor the construction of 100 bombers for the French Army, and were awarded a licence for the Bréguet design. This was put into production as the BUM (B for pusher-driven, U for Canton-Unné-powered, M for Michelin). A later revised version, the BLM, was the definitive Renault-powered version.[2]
Soon after the BUM entered service, the French Army requested that an escort fighter version be developed to protect the bombers from interception. Bréguet responded with a lightened design armed with a 37 mm (1.46 in) Hotchkiss cannon, intended to pick off enemy fighters before they closed to within range of their machine guns. This design yielded an aircraft that had defensive capabilities, without the engineering difficulties of producing a nose mounted gun that would have to shoot between the propellers of the aircraft it was mounted on. There still, however, remained a risk for the discarded bullet casings to fly into the propeller, causing damage. This entered production as the BUC (C for chasse, or pursuit) in its original Canton-Unné powered version and BLC in its Renault version.
Few of the BUC and BLC escort fighters were built, as their performance and utility were discovered to be lacking, and the doctrine of the cannon-armed escort fighter was soon abandoned in favour of countering fighters with other similar dedicated fighters.[1] The implementation of the BUC, BUM, and BLM in the war was minimal, as the pusher-configuration of aircraft that was popular at the time proved difficult to implement reliably for bombers. By mounting the hefty engine and propeller near the aft end of the aircraft, the center of mass was shifted closer to the center of pressure, meaning the aircraft was more sensitive to inputs and less stable, something generally unwanted in long range bombers.
Bréguet built 17 BUC/BLCs for the British Royal Navy's Royal Naval Air Service using British Sunbeam Mohawk engines. The Royal Navy called them the Bréguet de Chasse. They served alongside Caudron G.4s with No. 5 Wing RNAS – the Royal Navys first air unit specifically trained for long-range bombing – in Belgium from April to June 1916.[3]