Caudron C.430 Rafale Explained

The Caudron C.430 Rafale was a fast, two seat French touring monoplane. Soon after its first flight in 1933 it set an international class speed record.

Design and development

The C.430 Rafale was a two-seat development of the single seat Caudron C.362, the winner of the 1933 Coupe Deutsch de la Meurthe. Slightly larger and heavier, though with a lower wing loading, the Rafale was a low wing cantilever monoplane, wood framed and covered with a mixture of plywood and fabric. Its one piece, single spar wing was strongly straight tapered to elliptical tips and was plywood covered with an outer layer of fabric. There were flaps inboard of the ailerons.[1] [2]

Its fuselage was flat sided and fabric covered, with a deep, rounded decking running the full length. It had an air cooled inverted four cylinder inline Renault 4Pei Bengali engine in the nose, driving a two blade, two position variable pitch propeller. The Rafale's two seats were in tandem, one over the wing and the other behind the trailing edge, under a long (about a third of the fuselage length), narrow multi-framed canopy with a blunt, vertical windscreen and sliding access. Behind the canopy a long fairing continued its profile to the straight tapered, round tipped vertical tail, which included a balanced rudder that ended at the top of the fuselage. The tapered horizontal tail, with inset elevators, was mounted on the top of the fuselage largely ahead of the fin. Construction of the empennage was similar to that of the wing. The Rafale had a fixed tailskid undercarriage. Its wheels were on vertical legs from the wings and were largely enclosed within magnesium spats.[1] [2]

The C.430 Rafale F-AMVB probably flew for the first time in the last week of March 1934, though the other example may have flown earlier.[1] [3]

A replica of Helene Boucher's F-AMVB was built by Jean Precetti, which is now on display at the Musée de l'Air d'Angers.[4]

In 2023, Renault introduces the Renault Rafale vehicle as a tribute to the Caudron C.430 Rafale.[5]

Operational history

On 31 March 1934, only about a week after its first flight, the C.430 F-AMVB set a new International speed record of over for aircraft with an empty weight less than 560abbr=onNaNabbr=on.[1]

Hélène Boucher, a prominent French pilot in the mid-1930s, died in a landing approach accident in F-AMVB on 30 November 1934.[3]

Though Caudron dominated the 1935 Coupe Deutsch de la Meurthe, the single seat C.430/1 Rafale, F-AMVA re-engined with a more powerful Renault 438,[6] was outclassed by the single seat C.450 and C.460 machines and retired with engine problems after a few circuits.[7]

Variants

C.430: As described below; two built.
  • C.430/1: F-AMVA fitted with a Renault 438 engine in October 1934 for the 1935 Coupe Deutsch de la Meurthe.[3] [6]
  • References

    Bibliography

    Notes and References

    1. A new light plane record, 1934, p.359
    2. la Rougery, 1934, p.114
    3. Web site: French pre-war register. 7 March 2015.
    4. Web site: . C431 replica by Jean Precetti .
    5. Web site: What does Rafale mean? The meaning of the name of the new Renault Rafale in Renault History .
    6. Web site: Caudron C.430/1 Rafale . 7 March 2015.
    7. A Family Affair, 1935, p.1379